UTSA 15-17 GraduateCatalog
UTSA 15-17 GraduateCatalog
UTSA 15-17 GraduateCatalog
20152017
July 2015
Graduate Catalog
20152017
The University of Texas at San Antonio
Published July 2015
The online version of The University of Texas at San Antonio Graduate
Catalog is the official version.
Disclaimer
The provisions of this document do not constitute a contract, expressed
or implied, between any applicant, student, or faculty member and The
University of Texas at San Antonio or The University of Texas System.
This document is a general information publication, and it does not
contain all regulations that relate to students.
The University of Texas at San Antonio reserves the right to withdraw
courses at any time and to change fees, tuition, rules, calendar,
curriculum, degree programs, degree requirements, graduation
procedures, and any other requirement affecting students. The policies,
regulations, and procedures stated in this catalog are subject to change
without prior notice, and changes become effective whenever the
appropriate authorities so determine and may apply to both prospective
students and those already enrolled. University policies are required
to be consistent with policies adopted by the Board of Regents of The
University of Texas System and are in compliance with state and federal
laws.
Students are held individually responsible for meeting all
requirements as determined by The University of Texas at San
Antonio and The University of Texas System. Failure to read and
comply with policies, regulations, and procedures will not exempt a
student from whatever penalties he or she may incur.
Students should refer to the UTSA Information Bulletin for additional
policies, procedures, and information directly related to their enrollment at
UTSA.
Table of Contents
1. Admission ........................................................................................... 5
Readmission ................................................................................... 10
Registration .................................................................................... 11
Courses .......................................................................................... 14
Grades ........................................................................................... 15
Graduation ...................................................................................... 18
General Information
General Information
The Universitys Main Campus address is The University of Texas at San
Antonio, One UTSA Circle, San Antonio, TX 78249. The main telephone
number is (210) 458-4011. The address of the Downtown Campus
is 501 Csar E. Chvez Boulevard, San Antonio, Texas 78207. The
main telephone number is (210) 458-2700. Visit UTSA on the Web at
www.utsa.edu (http://www.utsa.edu).
The Mascot
The roadrunner, a bird representative of the Texas Hill Country and
the Southwest, was voted the UTSA mascot in 1977.
Accreditation
The University of Texas at San Antonio is accredited by the Commission
on Colleges of the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools to
award baccalaureate, masters, and doctorate degrees. Contact the
Commission on Colleges at 1866 Southern Lane, Decatur, Georgia
30033-4097 or call 404-679-4500 for questions about the accreditation of
The University of Texas at San Antonio.
1. Admission
Philosophy
Admission requirements for graduate study at UTSA are designed so
that admitted students will have a high probability of success in graduatelevel academic work. Graduate study is much more than a continuation
of undergraduate work and should be considered only by those students
with the capacity for independent thought and investigation.
Students seeking admission to a graduate program should visit the
Graduate School's admissions Web site at http://graduateschool.utsa.edu
for application forms and instructions.
Admission Classifications
Graduate applicants are admitted to the Graduate School in one of three
classifications: graduate degree-seeking, special graduate (non-degree),
or non-degree-seeking. Additionally, provisional limitations of conditional
or conditional on academic probation may be used in conjunction with
admission.
Graduate Degree-Seeking
A graduate degree-seeking student is one admitted to a graduate degree
program. Admission as a graduate degree-seeking student may be
unconditional, conditional, or conditional on academic probation.
Unconditional Admission
An applicant who has met the University-wide admission criteria and
admitted unconditionally upon recommendation of the Graduate Program
Committee and approval by the Dean of the Graduate School.
Conditional Admission
An applicant who has insufficient preparation in his or her intended
graduate degree program, or who lacks certain supporting documentation
required for unconditional admission, may be admitted conditionally upon
recommendation of the Graduate Program Committee and approval by
the Dean of the Graduate School.
Notification of condition(s) along with time limitations imposed by the
Graduate Program Committee will be included in the notification of
admission. If student does not adhere to the conditions, he or she will
be automatically dismissed from the University. The dismissal cannot be
petitioned by the department.
Non-Degree-Seeking Graduate
Student Admission
In order to be considered as a non-degree-seeking student, an applicant
must submit a graduate application along with a nonrefundable
application fee and meet the following criteria:
1. Earned a baccalaureate degree from a regionally accredited college
or university in the United States or have proof of equivalent training
at a foreign institution.
2. A minimum grade point average of at least 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) in the
last 30 semester credit hours.
3. Be in good standing at the last institution attended.
4. Unless otherwise specified, an official GRE or GMAT score must be
submitted.
5. An applicant from a country where the first language is not English,
unless a bachelor's degree or higher was earned in an Englishspeaking country, must have a minimum score of 550 on paperbased Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 79 on
internet-based TOEFL, or 6.5 on the International English Language
Testing System (IELTS).
6. Meet additional admission criteria set forth by the graduate program
of interest (see Graduate Program Requirements and Course
Descriptions).
Non-degree-seeking graduate students are advised that:
1. Credit earned as a non-degree-seeking graduate student will not
count toward a degree at UTSA.
2. If the student plans to obtain a graduate degree at UTSA, an
application for admission should be made as a graduate degreeseeking student.
Graduate
Admission
550
6.5
Qualification
1
American Samoa
Dominica
Ireland
Liberia
IELTS
English
100
Language
Assessment
Program (ELAP)
Exempt
79
Australia
Bahamas
Barbados
Belize
Canada (except Quebec)
Grand Cayman
Grenada
Guyana
Jamaica
New Zealand
Sierra Leone
Trinidad/Tobago
United Kingdom
U.S. Pacific Trust
IELTS is jointly managed by University of Cambridge English for
Speakers of Other Languages (Cambridge ESOL) Examinations,
British Council, and IDP Education Australia: IELTS Australia. For
more information, visit www.ielts.org.
TOEFL is an examination written by The Educational Testing Service
for The College Board. For more information, visit www.ets.org/toefl.
4. If attendance under the F-1 (student) visa is anticipated, students will
be required to submit a financial statement guaranteeing the ability
to pay all expenses while a student at UTSA. The statement may be
sent from a parent or guardian when endorsed by a bank or other
Credentials, Application
Deadlines, and Fees
Each applicant for admission is responsible for ensuring that all required
official application materials (completed application form, nonrefundable
application fee, test results, required transcripts, etc.) are on file in the
Graduate School by the application deadlines. Admission is not granted
until the applicants file is complete. Documents submitted in support of
an application become the property of UTSA and will not be returned.
Credentials
Transcripts
Students must list on the application for graduate admission all
community colleges, colleges and universities attended. An official
transcript from each institution attended must be sent to the Graduate
School. Official transcripts (i.e., one bearing the official seal of the school
and the Registrars signature) from the institution conferring the last
degree must be on file at the Graduate School prior to enrollment. An
applicant with a University of Texas at San Antonio undergraduate
degree does not need to provide a transcript.
Deadlines
Graduate application deadlines vary by program. The Graduate
School application, forms, deadlines, and program admission
requirements are available on the Graduate School website (http://
graduateschool.utsa.edu) or from the Graduate School. It is the
applicants responsibility to ensure that his/her application meets the
deadline set by the graduate program. Applicants should also note some
programs grant admission only for specific semesters.
Students enrolling in cooperative or joint programs between UTSA and
other institutions must satisfy admission requirements (including deadline
dates) of the other institutions as well as those of UTSA.
$30
Non-UTSA graduates
$45
International applicants
$80
Readmission
Masters and doctoral level students returning to UTSA who have
attended other institutions of higher education since they were last
enrolled at UTSA must submit an official transcript from each institution.
Eligibility for readmission of any former student depends on the students
academic status at the conclusion of the last UTSA semester of
enrollment and performance on any subsequent college or university
work attempted. Readmission must be recommended by the appropriate
Graduate Program Committee.
Masters Level
UTSA masters students who have attended a semester but have
not been in attendance for two full years are required to reapply and
submit an application for graduate admission, and pay a nonrefundable
application fee (see application fee table), by the application deadline.
Doctoral Level
UTSA doctoral students must be enrolled every semester unless
specified otherwise by the Graduate Program Committee. Doctoral
students who have not been in attendance for one semester and do
not have an approved leave of absence must submit an application
for graduate admission, and pay a nonrefundable application fee (see
application fee table), by the application deadline.
Military Service
Students who withdrew from the University to perform military service
(not including Texas National Guard training exercises) will not have
to requalify for admission and will be reactivated upon request made
within one year of being released from active military service. A returning
student may be eligible for the same financial assistance provided before
the students withdrawal.
10
11
2. General Academic
Regulations
Registration (p. 11)
Records and Classification of Students (p. 13)
Courses (p. 14)
Grades (p. 15)
Academic Standing (p. 17)
Graduation (p. 18)
Academic Honesty (p. 18)
Registration
Academic Advising
UTSA views sound academic advising as a significant responsibility in
educating its students. Academic advisors assist students in developing
intellectual potential and exploring educational opportunities and life
goals. Many individuals within the UTSA community contribute to the
advising process, including faculty and staff academic advisors. Students
also are encouraged to develop mentoring relationships with faculty for
additional information and support.
Students are responsible for seeking adequate academic advice,
for knowing and meeting degree requirements, and for enrolling in
appropriate courses to ensure orderly and timely completion of their
degree programs. Frequent advisor contact provides students with
current academic information and promotes progress toward educational
goals.
For more information on academic advising in their departments,
graduate students should contact the Graduate Advisor of Record.
Auditing Courses
UTSA students and nonstudents who wish to audit a course may do
so with the approval of the instructor and the chair of the department in
which the course is offered, provided there is space in the classroom
after all registered students have been accommodated. The minimum
enrollment in a course must be reached without auditors.
Audit forms are accepted the first day of class through the 12th day of
class (census day). No forms will be accepted past this date. Auditing
entitles a student to listen and observe. Participation of an auditor in class
is at the discretion of the instructor. No UTSA credit is granted for courses
that are audited; no official record is made of enrollment in classes
on an audit basis. Due to the format of studio/laboratory use, auditors
are not approved for art courses. Students not enrolled in courses at
the University are not allowed to audit courses that require the use of
the University computing system, with the exception of the Learning
Management System (i.e., Blackboard).
All auditors must submit a signed Audit Course Form (http://utsa.edu/
registrar/forms.html#registration) to the Enrollment Services Center, no
sooner than the first day of class. A UTSA student pays an auditing fee
of $25 per course. Auditors who are not registered UTSA students must
pay an auditing fee of $50 per course. Persons over 65 years of age are
permitted to audit without paying an auditing fee.
Permission to audit must be obtained and fees paid beginning the first
day of class through the Census Date. Students who register for a course
and later want to change the course to an audit must officially drop that
course before submitting an Audit Course Form.
Nonstudent auditors who want library privileges may receive them
through the Community Borrowing Program. More information is available
at http://lib.utsa.edu or at the UTSA Library front desk on the third floor of
the John Peace Library building.
Nonstudent auditors who want UTSA parking privileges must register
their vehicles and purchase a parking permit. To purchase a parking
permit, nonstudent auditors should go to the Parking and Transportation
Services office in the Multidisciplinary Studies Building (MS 1.01.52) with
their validated Audit Course Form.
Cancellation of Enrollment
Students who fail to fulfill admission, registration, or financial
requirements, or who otherwise fail to adhere to academic regulations
may have their enrollment for the semester cancelled. Students may
apply for readmission for a subsequent semester provided they have
resolved the cause of cancellation.
Dropping Courses
Students may drop courses from their schedules for a limited time each
semester. The online registration calendar for each semester indicates
the deadlines for students to drop courses each term.
Courses officially dropped before the Census Date do not appear on a
students transcript. See the online registration calendar each semester
for Census Dates.
Students who drop courses between the Census Date and the Automatic
W Date have a record of the courses on their transcripts with an
automatic grade of W. See the online registration calendar for the
Automatic W Date. The change becomes official after it is processed by
the Office of the Registrar.
The Automatic W Date for graduate students is the end of the ninth
week of classes for Fall and Spring semesters, the end of the third week
of classes for a five-week Summer term, and the end of the sixth week of
classes for a ten-week Summer term. Appropriate adjustments are made
12
for the Automatic W Date for shorter Summer terms (see the online
registration calendar).
Faculty and staff will not drop a student from a course automatically for
nonattendance; the student must initiate the process and complete any
necessary steps to ensure that the class is dropped.
Under certain circumstances, students may be dropped from courses
administratively by college deans. Students who do not meet course
prerequisites or who fail to attend a course prior to Census Date may
be dropped from courses. If a dean determines that a student should be
dropped from a course for these or other documented circumstances, the
student will be notified by the college overseeing the course. Students
cannot assume that they will be automatically dropped from any class
for failure to attend or failure to pay tuition and fees. Students are still
responsible for dropping courses by the official deadline or they will
receive a grade of F in the class. Students are responsible for checking
their schedules on ASAP and for checking their official UTSA e-mail
accounts to determine if they have been dropped from a class.
After the Automatic W Date, a student may not drop a course except
with the approval of the Dean of the college in which the course is offered
and then only for urgent and substantiated, nonacademic reasons.
Students who want to drop all classes after the semester begins should
refer to the section Withdrawal from the University in this chapter.
Registration Procedures
Registration for Classes
Students who attend classes at UTSA must be officially registered
or approved to audit a course. Registration instructions are online
each semester in ASAP at https://asap.utsa.edu. Questions regarding
registration should be directed to the Enrollment Services Center or the
Office of the Registrar.
UTSA does not guarantee the availability of particular courses or
sections, and admission to classes is permitted only until the maximum
number of students allowable in any section has been reached. UTSA
reserves the right to cancel any course or section in which the number of
registrants does not warrant its continuation.
A student is not permitted to register for classes offered in two
consecutive time periods on different campuses, one at the Main Campus
and the other at the Downtown Campus, unless there is at least a 40
minute period of time between the end of the first class and the beginning
of the second class or the student has received special permission
from the Dean of the college of his or her major to register for the two
consecutive classes.
Late Registration
Late registration permits students who have been admitted to UTSA
to register for classes during an allotted time just prior to and at the
beginning of the semester as indicated each semester in the online
registration calendar in ASAP at https://asap.utsa.edu. Since many
courses will have been closed at capacity, late registrants may need
to select their courses from a reduced schedule. Students are not
permitted to register after the close of the late registration period, except
Adding a course after the late registration period requires the approval of
the course instructor and the chair of the department offering the course.
After the Census Date in any semester, students may not add courses
except in extremely rare and extenuating circumstances as approved
by the Dean of the college offering the course and by the Dean of the
Graduate School.
Appeals to add a course after Census Date must have final approvals
and be processed through Enrollment Services no later than one month
after Census Date for long Fall and Spring semesters or one week after
Census Date for shorter terms of Summer, Fall and Spring semesters.
For information on Census Date and deadlines for adding classes,
students should refer to the University Calendar or the online registration
calendar for each semester.
Undergraduates seeking to register for or to add a graduate course in any
of these time periods must obtain the special approvals specified in the
section Enrollment in Graduate Courses in Chapter 1, Bachelors Degree
Regulations, of the UTSA Undergraduate Catalog.
13
Students who withdraw from all classes are subject to the Universitys
academic probation and dismissal regulations. Students withdrawing
should refer to the regulations on refunds of tuition and fees, readmission
policies, and requirements for maintaining registration.
Full time
Three-quarter time
Not applicable
Half time
Number of Credit
Hours Enrolled
Summer
Transcripts
Official transcripts of all coursework taken at UTSA may be requested at
the Enrollment Services Center or online through ASAP. See the UTSA
Web site at http://utsa.edu/registrar/transcripts.cfm for details on how to
request a transcript.
While enrolled at UTSA, students who attend other colleges or
universities are required to submit official academic transcripts to
Graduate Admissions from every college or university attended at the
end of the semester during which coursework was undertaken, even
if courses have been withdrawn. This includes concurrent enrollment
while attending UTSA. Failure to do so may result in the rejection of the
transcript request, cancellation of enrollment, permanent dismissal from
UTSA, or other appropriate disciplinary action. Transcripts from other
institutions submitted to UTSA become the property of the University and
are not reproduced or mailed to other institutions, agencies, or individuals
as an official transcript.
Official transcripts will not be issued for students who have a financial
obligation or other commitment outstanding to the University until the
obligation is cleared.
Catalog of Graduation
Graduate students have six years from their term of original registration
as degree seeking to complete a graduate degree program under the
catalog in effect at the time of initial registration at UTSA, provided they
are continuously enrolled at UTSA. If a student drops out for one or more
long semester (Spring or Fall), he or she has the option of reenrolling
under a subsequent catalog. These students will have six years to
complete degree requirements under the new catalog. In the event
that certain required courses are discontinued, substitutions may be
authorized or required by the appropriate Graduate Program Committee.
Degree requirements may be changed from one catalog to the next. The
student is normally bound by the requirements of the catalog in force at
the time of his or her first registration; the student may choose, however,
to fulfill the requirements of a subsequent catalog, with approval of the
Graduate School.
Change of Name
A students name on official records at UTSA is the name under which
the student applied for admission, unless a Name and ID Number
Change Form has been processed through the Office of the Registrar.
The official University transcript will carry the current name and the most
immediate previous name, if any. Name and ID Number Change Forms
should be supported by appropriate legal documentation.
Change of Address
Currently enrolled students who have changed their address must notify
the Graduate School on the appropriate form or on the UTSA Web site in
ASAP at https://asap.utsa.edu. Official notification of change of address
is necessary for proper identification of student records and for accurate
mailing of correspondence and information pertaining to graduation
requirements. Students who are applying for graduation will specify on
the Application for Graduation the address where their diploma is to
be mailed. This does not change the official mailing address with the
University.
14
Courses
Course Numbering System
All courses are designated by four-digit numbers following a two- or
three-letter abbreviation of the subject of the course. The first digit
indicates the level of the course. Courses beginning with 0 are
developmental education courses and may not be counted toward a
degree. Courses beginning with 1 or 2 are lower-division (freshman
and sophomore level). Courses beginning with 3 or 4 are upperdivision (junior and senior level). Courses beginning with a 5 or higher
are graduate-level courses.
The second and third digits in the course numbers are used within the
colleges by each department to distinguish individual courses. The fourth
digit indicates the semester-credit-hour value of each course.
The number of lecture and laboratory contact hours per week are
provided in parentheses in the course description sections of the UTSA
Graduate Catalog immediately following the course number and title.
For example, (3-0) indicates three hours of lecture and zero hours of
laboratory per week.
Prerequisites
Prerequisites are stated for many courses listed in this catalog.
Prerequisites advise students of the background expected of all
students in the course. It is the students responsibility to be sure that all
prerequisites are met before enrolling in any course. When a student has
not met the specific prerequisites listed, he or she may, under special
conditions, obtain permission to register from the instructor of the course.
Some colleges may also require the permission of the Department Chair
and the Associate Dean. Students who do not meet prerequisites for a
course and do not have the appropriate permissions to register may be
dropped from the course.
15
Grades
Grades
Explanation of Credit, Grading System, and Symbols (p. 15)
D-
0.67
Failure(See Graduate
Academic Dismissal)
CR
Credit. Indicates
successful credit by
examination (see
Credit by Examination)
or through faculty
evaluation of selected
internships and
practica.
NC
No Credit. Indicates
unsatisfactory progress.
Withdrawal. Indicates
that the student was
passing at the time of
withdrawal or drop.
IN
Incomplete. Assigned
at the discretion of the
instructor; see details
below.
NR
No report. Assigned
only by the Registrar
when unusual
circumstances do not
allow a student's grade
to be entered by the
deadline for processing
grades. It is replaced
with the official grade
as soon as possible.
EX
Expelled
RP
Research in Progress.
Used to denote
research in progress
only for MUS 6913, and
Master's Thesis and
Doctoral Dissertation
courses. When
the project, thesis,
or dissertation is
complete, the "RP"
gradees will be
changed to letter
grades up to the
maximum number
of semester credit
hours approved for the
specific degree.
Grade Points
Meaning of Grade
Symbol
A+
4.00
Outstanding
4.00
Outstanding
A-
3.67
Above Average
B+
3.33
Above Average
3.00
Above Average
B-
2.67
Average
C+
2.33
Average
2.00
Average
C-
1.67
Below Average
D+
1.33
1.00
when a definite grade can be given for the work done. The student must
have been in attendance at least three-fourths of the term to receive a
grade of IN.
Whenever a grade of Incomplete is assigned, the instructor is required
to submit requirements for removal of the Incomplete. During the regular
grading period this is done electronically. After the grade submission
deadline, a Requirements for Removal of Incomplete form must be
submitted to the Deans office. The Deans office will then submit the
form to the Office of the Registrar. The instructor is responsible for filing
a Change of Grade form with the Office of the Registrar when all work is
finished.
Incomplete work must be made up no later than the end of the final
examination period one year from the semester the Incomplete was
received and before the students graduation. If the work is not completed
within this time, the IN remains on the students record, and credit may
be earned only when the student reenrolls in the course and completes
the entire course satisfactorily. The time limit does not apply to graduatelevel thesis, internship, or dissertation courses, except that an IN cannot
be removed after a degree is awarded. The time limit does apply to all
other graduate courses, including special problems and independent
study courses.
In no circumstances will grades be changed after one calendar year.
Repeating Courses
Courses designated may be repeated for credit in the catalog may
be repeated with both semester credit hours and grade points earned
being counted. Otherwise, students at the graduate level may not elect
to repeat courses for the purpose of raising a grade. However, when a
course was taken more than six years ago, or upon the recommendation
of the appropriate Graduate Program Committee, the course may
be repeated; in such cases, both grades in the course appear on the
transcript and both are counted in the students grade point average.
Only semester credit hours for the repeated course may be counted
toward the degree.
Grade Reports
Reporting of Grades by Faculty
Final grades are reported by course instructors every term and are due
48 hours after the final examination. Final grades cannot be withheld nor
can reporting of them be deferred.
Grade Reports
The Office of the Registrar compiles final grades after the close of each
semester and each summer term. Grades are available in ASAP at
https://asap.utsa.edu. Students who are removed from, placed on, or
continued on academic probation and students who are dismissed from
UTSA will receive notification from the Office of the Registrar.
Transcripts may be withheld from any student who owes tuition and fees
to the University.
16
Change of Grades
Change of Grades
Individual faculty members retain primary responsibility for assigning
grades and evaluations. The faculty members judgment is final unless
compelling evidence shows discrimination, differential treatment, or a
factual mistake. Under unusual circumstances, however, grades may
be assigned or changed by someone other than the faculty member.
Grades may be changed or assigned through administrative channels in
the following procedure:
1. Circumstances when an assigned grade of A+, A, A-, B+,
B, B-, C+, C, C-, D+, D, D-, or F might be changed.
In this case, the formal appeals process stated in the catalog must
be initiated by the student. Because a grade change of this type
is related directly to issues of academic freedom, a committee
composed of qualified faculty should be appointed by the appropriate
Graduate Program Committee to assess the academic merits of the
appeal. The committee report should weigh heavily in the subsequent
administrative review by the Department Chair, College Dean, and
Graduate School Dean. Grades may be changed only if compelling
evidence demonstrates discrimination, differential treatment, or
factual mistake.
2. Circumstances when an assigned grade of IN or NC might be
changed. Under unusual circumstances, a faculty member of record
may be unable to assign grades in a timely manner. Examples
include death or incapacitation of a faculty member; a faculty
member who permanently leaves the University and refuses or fails
to respond; and a faculty member who is on leave and cannot be
reached.
Additional work performed by a student may not be used to raise a grade
that has been reported to the Office of the Registrar.
In no circumstances will grades be changed after one calendar year.
17
Academic Standing
A students academic standing, whether the student is a doctoral student,
a graduate degree-seeking student, a special graduate student, or a nondegree-seeking graduate student, is defined as good standing, academic
probation, or academic dismissal.
Good Standing
Good standing is the absence of any contingency that would result in the
students being on academic probation or academic dismissal.
Academic Probation
Academic probation describes the standing of a student at the graduate
level who is in one of the following categories:
1. A student who fails to achieve a grade point average in any term at
UTSA of 3.0 or higher, irrespective of level of courses taken.
2. A student who received a grade of D+, D, or D- in any course in
a term and a grade point average of 3.0 or higher.
3. A student who does not meet all requirements for unconditional
or regular admission and who, by special action, is admitted on
academic probation.
4. A student who has been reinstated following academic dismissal.
5. To graduate, all graduate students must have an overall grade point
average of at least a 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale).
Academic probation is cleared only when none of the above criteria apply
and when the student achieves an overall grade point average of 3.0
as a graduate student at UTSA. Students on academic probation are
encouraged to discuss their status with their academic advisors.
Academic Dismissal
Academic dismissal occurs:
1. When a student at the graduate level earns a grade point average of
less than 2.0 in any term.
2. When a student at the graduate level earns a grade of F in any
course.
3. When a student at the graduate level is admitted on probation with
conditions and fails to meet a condition.
4. When a student at the graduate level who is on academic probation
during a term would again be placed on academic probation under
the provisions of academic probation set forth above. If, however, the
students UTSA grade point average for the term is at least 3.0, he or
she will continue on academic probation.
5. When a student at the graduate level is unable to pass an oral or
written exam (such as the Comprehensive Examination or Qualifying
Examination) required for the degree after the maximum of two
attempts. Some programs may have more stringent requirements.
6. When a student at the graduate level fails to make satisfactory
progress toward the degree, as defined by University regulations
and the regulations of the graduate program in which the student is
enrolled.
Graduate Reinstatement
A student who has been dismissed academically may petition for
reinstatement after one long semester (Fall or Spring) has elapsed
from the date of dismissal. Under exceptional circumstances, a petition
may be considered earlier. Students are required to complete a
reinstatement packet along with a letter containing all explanations,
recommendations, or doctors statements in support of the students
request for reinstatement and submit them to the Dean of the Graduate
School on or before June 15 for Fall Semesters, October 15 for Spring
Semesters, or March 15 for Summer Semesters.
The Graduate School prepares the petition for reinstatement and submits
it to the Departments Graduate Program Committee. The Graduate
Program Committee will review the petitioners letter and academic
record and make a recommendation concerning reinstatement to
the Dean of the Graduate School. If the Petition for Reinstatement is
disapproved, the student may not file another petition until the following
semester. A student who has been dismissed may not graduate without
first being reinstated.
Graduation
Graduation Dates
Degrees are awarded at the end of each Fall, Spring, and Summer
semester. All degree requirements must be completed on or before the
end of the term. Commencement ceremonies are held in December
and May at the end of the Fall and Spring semesters. With the
exception of doctoral students, students who graduate at the end of the
Summer Semester may participate in either the May or the December
Commencement ceremony. Doctoral students may participate in the
December Commencement ceremony.
Doctoral students may participate in commencement ceremonies only
after completing all requirements for graduation, including the successful
defense of the dissertation and subsequent acknowledgement by the
Graduate School of all required documentation. Specifically, a doctoral
student intending to graduate in the Summer Term and who has not
completed the successful defense of the dissertation and filed the
appropriate documentation with the Graduate School may not participate
in the Spring Commencement ceremony. Summer Term graduates are
welcome to participate in the December Commencement ceremony
following their Summer Term graduation.
Information regarding Graduation and Commencement is available at
http://utsa.edu/registrar/graduation.cfm.
18
Academic Honesty
Ethical Standards
The University can best function and accomplish its objectives in an
atmosphere of high ethical standards. All students are expected and
encouraged to contribute to such an atmosphere in every way possible,
especially by observing all accepted principles of academic honesty.
19
Academic Honesty
Fraudulent Degrees
Under Chapter 61, Subchapter G, of the Texas Education Code, it is
illegal to use a fraudulent or substandard degree for gaining admission
into an educational program, presenting oneself to the public as an
expert, gaining employment or promotion, or gaining a governmental
position with authority over others. Violation of this subchapter is a
misdemeanor and falls under the Deceptive Trade Practices Act.
3. Certificate Programs
Certificate programs provide opportunities for postgraduate training to
those with undergraduate degrees. Certificate programs are narrower
in scope and shorter in duration than masters degrees. Certificate
programs are not degree programs.
Admission Requirements
Applicants who are currently enrolled in a graduate degree program at
UTSA have already met University requirements for admission. In this
case, no formal application process is necessary. The applicant should
contact the Certificate Program Advisor and complete a form requesting
permission to enter and complete the certificate program. If the request is
approved, this form will be signed by the Certificate Program Advisor and
the Dean of the College or Director of the Center in which the certificate
program is housed. A copy of this form will be sent to the Graduate
Advisor of Record for the students degree program, the department in
which the applicants program is housed, and the Graduate School.
Applicants who are not currently enrolled in a graduate degree program
at UTSA will be required to apply for admission to UTSA as a special
(non-degree-seeking) graduate student and to indicate their intent to
seek admission into a certificate program. Applicants will be required to
meet University admission requirements for special graduate students. If
admitted as a special graduate student, the applicant should contact the
Certificate Program Advisor and complete a form requesting permission
to enter and complete the certificate program. The form will be signed by
the Certificate Program Advisor and the Dean of the College or Director
of the Center in which the certificate program is housed. A copy of this
form will be sent to the Graduate School.
If it is determined by the Certificate Program Advisor that an applicant
requires prerequisite background courses to adequately prepare for
the courses included in the certificate program, this will be noted in the
applicants file. The applicant will be notified that the prerequisite courses
must be taken before enrolling in certificate program coursework.
Any applicant who is admitted into a certificate program without being
currently enrolled in a graduate degree program is considered to be
a special graduate student. If the applicant wishes to be admitted into
a degree program, they will be required to apply to that program as a
degree-seeking student. Admittance into or completion of a certificate
program is not considered to be qualification for entry into a graduate
degree program.
Applicants who are pursuing a certificate as special graduate students will
not be eligible for financial aid.
Applicants who are admitted into a certificate program while also pursuing
a graduate degree will be classified as degree-seeking students.
Transfer of Credit
Students are expected to complete the majority of all coursework at
UTSA. Transfer credit of no more than 3 semester credit hours may
be allowed for graduate coursework completed at another regionally
accredited institution or with proof of equivalent accreditation from
a foreign institution. Exceptions require approval of the appropriate
Graduate Program Committee, academic College, and the Graduate
20
School, and must meet conditions for transfer of credit. Work counted
toward a degree at another institution cannot be transferred.
Conditions for transfer of credit:
1. Students must complete the form Transfer of Graduate Credit
towards Masters Degree.
2. Student must be in a current masters degree or graduate certificate
program.
3. Student must be in good academic standing.
4. The courses must have been completed with a grade of B (3.0) or
better.
5. Coursework must be from an accredited university and have not been
used in another degree program.
6. An official transcript from the institution where the coursework was
completed must be submitted.
7. All coursework must have been completed no more than six years
before the degree was awarded.
8. Coursework is subject to approval of the appropriate Graduate
Program Committee and academic College in which the program is
administered.
9. Courses must be defined as graduate-level work at the institution
where the credit was earned.
10. International transcripts must be evaluated by a UTSA approved
foreign credential evaluation service agency.
Course Restrictions
All courses offered in a certificate program must be approved graduatelevel courses. See individual certificate program descriptions for programspecific requirements. The following graduate certificate programs are
offered:
21
Course Restrictions
22
23
4. Master's Degree
Regulations
Master's Degree Regulations (p. 24)
Degree Requirements (p. 24)
Transfer of Credit (p. 26)
Degree Requirements
University-wide Requirements
In order to receive a masters degree from UTSA, the following minimum
requirements must be met:
1. The student must be admitted as a graduate degree-seeking student
for the degree sought.
2. The student must remove all conditions of admission, if any were
assigned at the time of admission.
3. Subject to the six-year time limitation, the student must satisfactorily
complete all coursework as specified in his or her disciplines
program of study, and, if Option I is selected, must satisfactorily
complete the thesis as outlined in the Options for Masters Degrees
section of this chapter.
4. The student must formally apply for the degree in the Office of the
Registrar no later than the deadline for the semester in which he or
she intends to graduate (for deadlines, see the online registration
calendar).
5. The student must satisfactorily complete the comprehensive
examination, except as provided by the M.B.A. degree and Master of
Accountancy.
6. The student must meet the grade point average requirement of 3.0
or higher (on a 4.0 scale) in all work counted as part of the degree
program.
7. No courses in which grades of less than C (below 2.0 on a 4.0
scale) were earned may be applied to a graduate degree, nor may
courses for which the grade of CR was earned by examination
be applied to minimum degree requirements. Credit for selected
internships and practica in which a grade of CR was earned may
be applied to minimum degree requirements upon approval of the
Graduate Program Committee.
8. To graduate, all graduate students must have an overall grade point
average of at least a 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale).
9. The majority of graduate coursework for a masters program must be
completed at UTSA.
Detailed descriptions of each of the above requirements are included in
this catalog.
Comprehensive Examination
A candidate for a thesis or nonthesis masters degree must, in addition
to other requirements, pass (according to department standards)
the comprehensive examination, which may be oral, written, or both.
Students must be registered during any semester or term in which they
are taking required examinations. If registered for no other courses,
students must be enrolled in 6961, Comprehensive Examination.
24
Supervising Committee
Each comprehensive examination is developed, administered, and
scored under the guidance of a supervising committee with two or more
members, one of whom is designated as chair. The chair must be a
member of the Graduate Faculty in the major area of study.
In general, all committee members must be members of the Graduate
Faculty in the major area of study. Occasionally, scholars who hold
nontenured or tenure-track faculty appointments at the University, such
as research professors or adjunct faculty members, or off-campus
scholars, are appointed because their expertise would be valuable to the
student. The composition of the committee is subject to approval by the
Dean of the Graduate School.
The supervising committee is responsible for the quality, depth, and
balance of the comprehensive examination.
25
Degree Requirements
Catalog of Graduation
Graduate students have six years from the semester of original
registration as degree-seeking to complete a graduate degree program
under the catalog in effect at the time of initial registration at UTSA,
provided they are continuously enrolled at UTSA. If a student drops out
for one or more long semester (Spring or Fall), they have the option
of reenrolling under a subsequent catalog. These students will have
six years to complete degree requirements under the new catalog. In
the event that certain required courses are discontinued, substitutions
may be authorized or required by the appropriate Graduate Program
Committee.
Transfer of Credit
Limitations
Quantity
Students are expected to complete the majority of all coursework at
UTSA. Transfer credit of usually not more than 6 semester credit hours
may be allowed for graduate coursework completed at another regionally
accredited institution or with proof of equivalent accreditation from
a foreign institution. Exceptions require approval of the appropriate
Graduate Program Committee, academic College, and the Graduate
School, and must meet conditions for transfer of credit. Work counted
toward a degree at another institution cannot be transferred.
Conditions for transfer of credit:
1. Students must complete the form Transfer of Graduate Credit
towards Masters Degree.
2. Student must be in a current masters degree program.
3. Student must be in good academic standing.
4. The courses must have been completed with a grade of B (3.0) or
better.
5. Coursework must be from an accredited university and have not been
used in another degree program.
6. An official transcript from the institution where the coursework was
completed must be submitted.
26
Not Accepted
Audited Courses
7. All coursework must have been completed no more than six years
before the degree was awarded.
No UTSA credit is granted for courses that are audited; no official record
is made of enrollment in classes on an audit basis.
Time Limitation
All requirements for a masters degree must be completed within one
six-year period. Work over six years old may be reinstated only with the
permission of the Dean of the Graduate School, upon recommendation of
the Graduate Program Committee.
Evaluation of Courses
The students Graduate Advisor of Record and the College evaluate
transcripts and designate which graduate courses are acceptable under
the above provisions for transfer toward a masters degree at UTSA.
Whether or not a course is transferable as graduate coursework is
determined by the course number assigned by the institution awarding
the credit. To be transferable to UTSA, courses must be defined as
graduate courses at the institution where credit was earned. Courses that
are defined as undergraduate upper-division by their course numbers,
but that can be applied to a graduate degree at the institution awarding
the credit, are not accepted for transfer toward a masters degree at
UTSA. All work submitted for transfer credit must have been completed
with grades of A or B (3.0) and must have been completed no more
than six years before the degree was awarded. Competency based
coursework or credit only courses will not be accepted.
Credit by Examination
Credit by examination at UTSA is intended to enable undergraduate
students to receive credit for courses leading to a bachelors degree in
which they may already have achieved the objectives. Credit cannot be
earned by CEEB examination or by UT Challenge Examination for any
courses used to meet minimum requirements for a graduate degree or
graduate teacher certification program.
The purpose of a dual degree program is to allow students to undertake
complementary programs of graduate study simultaneously through
curricular arrangements that allow dual credit for a specified set of
courses. Dual degree programs lead to two separate diplomas. In most
cases, the dual degree program allows you to complete both degrees
in a shorter period of time than if you pursued the individual degrees
27
Transfer of Credit
Admission Requirements
Students must apply and be admitted as degree-seeking to each
graduate program separately, and abide by all program requirements.
Admission to these programs requires the submission of two completed
application forms, one for each program. Each programs entrance
requirements must be met in addition to University-wide requirements,
and students must be accepted to both programs. As a matter of note,
admission requirements established by the Graduate School or by either
degree program may not be waived. For example, if one program in
the dual degree program requires GRE scores and the other does not,
the applicant must take the standardized exam to be considered for
admission to the dual degree. Students in a graduate program that later
become interested in the dual degree option must contact the Graduate
Advisor of Record prior to completing 24 semester credit hours in the
program.
Academic Requirements
All grades earned in dual degree status are used for purposes of
determining University and program academic good standing, academic
probation, and graduate requirements. In addition, students participating
in a dual degree program are subject to the policies and procedures
of each respective program. A student in a dual degree program who
fails to make satisfactory academic progress and is placed on academic
probation or is dismissed from the University must consult with both
program Graduate Advisors of Record about the future course of action
(See Graduate Catalog, General Academic Regulations section).
Students who are dismissed from either program are dismissed from the
University and are no longer considered to be in a dual degree program.
A student who has been dismissed academically may only petition for
reinstatement to the program in which they were in good standing when
dismissed. If readmitted, the student may enroll in and, if applicable to the
program for which the student is eligible to be readmitted, use courses
for credit toward the degree program in which they were in good standing
when dismissed. Students may not take courses in the program which
prompted their dismissal and may not use such courses for dual degree
credit. If a student is dismissed from a dual degree program, the student
may not be retained or readmitted into the dual degree program.
Other Requirements
Dual degrees are only conferred simultaneously. Students may not be
awarded an individual degree while in a dual degree program. Should
a dual degree student choose to withdraw from one of the two degree
programs, the student will have the option of completing the other degree
following the normal requirements of that individual graduate program.
5. Doctoral Degree
Regulations
Doctoral Degree Regulations (p. 28)
Admission to Candidacy (p. 30)
Completing the Degree (p. 30)
Degree Requirements (p. 28)
Graduate Program Committee Requirements (p. 29)
Transfer of Credit (p. 29)
Degree Requirements
University-wide Requirements
In order to receive a doctoral degree from UTSA, the following minimum
requirements must be met:
1. The student must be admitted as a doctoral degree-seeking student
for the degree sought.
2. The student must remove all conditions of admission, if any were
assigned at the time of admission.
3. The student must maintain continuous enrollment in doctoral-level
courses until time of graduation. Exceptions are made for students on
an approved leave of absence.
4. Upon satisfying the admission to candidacy requirements, the
student must be approved for admission to candidacy by the
Graduate Program Committee, academic College and the Dean of
the Graduate School.
5. Upon satisfying the Dissertation Committee requirements and upon
recommendation of the Graduate Program Committee, the academic
College, and the Graduate School, the Dissertation Committee is
appointed.
6. The student must pass the final oral examination (defense of
dissertation).
7. All completed coursework included in the final program of study
must have been taken within the preceding eight years to include
successful completion and defense of the dissertation.
8. The student must formally apply for the degree in the Office of
the Registrar no later than the deadline for the semester in which
they intend to graduate (for deadlines, see the online registration
calendar).
9. The student must meet the grade-point-average requirement of 3.0
or higher (on a 4.0 scale) in all work counted as part of the degree
program.
10. No courses in which grades of less than C (below 2.0 on a 4.0
scale) were earned may be applied to a doctoral degree.
11. To graduate, all doctoral students must have an overall grade point
average of at least a 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale).
12. The majority of graduate coursework must be completed at UTSA.
Residence Requirement
Depending on doctoral program requirements, a student may be required
to spend at least two consecutive semesters (Fall and Spring, Summer
Terms I and II and Fall, or Spring and Summer Terms I and II) in
28
Course Requirements
No specific number of semester credit hours of coursework has
been established for doctoral programs at UTSA, although advanced
coursework is an essential part of a doctoral candidates preparation.
Individual doctoral programs may set minimum semester-credit-hour
requirements for the attainment of the degree.
Support Work
In addition to courses and research in a field of specialization within the
major, supporting coursework will be taken to broaden or supplement the
students preparation.
Support work may consist of coursework in one area or several; it may be
in conference, laboratory, or problems courses; it may be a supervised
activity off campus relevant to the major interest. Some portion, not
necessarily all, of the support work is normally outside the major area
unless that area is of a multidisciplinary nature. At least three courses,
or their equivalents, from outside the area of specialization are generally
required.
Language Proficiency
Students are required to possess a competent command of English.
Proficiency in a foreign language is a matter of degree option. Students
should refer to individual degree descriptions for English and foreign
language proficiency requirements.
29
Transfer of Credit
Leave of Absence
Students enrolled in a doctoral program may apply for a leave of
absence for one Fall or Spring semester when events such as illness
or injury, active military service, or the need to provide care for a family
member prevent active participation in the degree program. Continuous
registration as a doctoral student is required unless a formal leave of
absence is granted by the dean of the college in which the students
program is administered. A leave of absence may be granted for military
duty or medical reasons. A leave of absence may be granted for other
reasons if additional approval is obtained by the Vice Provost and Dean
of the Graduate School. No degree examinations may be taken while a
student is on a leave of absence. If the student has not yet been admitted
to candidacy for the doctoral degree, this request must be approved in
advance of the leave by the graduate adviser. If the student has been
admitted to candidacy, the application must be approved in advance by
the graduate adviser and the graduate associate dean of the college and
Dean of the Graduate School. A leave of absence is required for Fall and
Spring semesters (and/or Summer if doctoral program mandates Summer
enrollment). Under no circumstances may a leave of absence be applied
retroactively.
A leave of absence will prevent the student from receiving student
funding from his or her program and may affect ability to receive financial
aid or loans and/or to defer payments on loans. Students should contact
the Office of Financial Aid with questions regarding financial aid or loan
status.
A student returning from a leave of absence must enroll for the following
Fall or Spring Semester or provide a written request for a leave of
absence extension (a leave of absence may not exceed one year
throughout the students degree program).
A student who does not register or who does not secure an approved
leave of absence extension each semester will be considered to have
withdrawn and will be dropped from the program and from candidacy for
the degree. Approval of a Petition for Reinstatement will be required for
reinstatement. For more information, visit the Graduate School Web site
at http://graduateschool.utsa.edu.
Transfer of Credit
Students are expected to complete all coursework at UTSA. Exceptions
require approval of the appropriate Graduate Program Committee,
academic College, and the Graduate School, and must meet conditions
5. All coursework must have been completed no more than six years
before the degree was awarded.
6. Coursework is subject to approval of the appropriate Graduate
Program Committee and academic College in which the program is
administered.
7. Courses must be defined as graduate-level work at the institution
where the credit was earned.
8. International transcripts must be evaluated by a UTSA approved
foreign credential evaluation service agency.
Students should not take courses they plan to transfer from another
institution the semester they plan to graduate due to the time limitation on
receiving the grades and certifying the student for graduation.
Applicants with a masters degree in the field of the doctoral program
of interest or related field may apply a maximum of 30 semester credit
hours of previously earned graduate credit toward a post-baccalaureate
doctoral degree program, pending approval from the Graduate Program
Committee, academic College, and Dean of the Graduate School;
provided the credit has not been used toward another doctoral degree.
Limited Acceptability
UTSA Undergraduate Courses
Credit earned in undergraduate-level courses may not be applied
to a doctoral degree program. Such courses may be taken to meet
background or support requirements, if necessary.
Not Accepted
Correspondence and Extension Courses
Courses completed by correspondence or extension may not be applied
to a doctoral degree program.
Admission to Candidacy
Students seeking a doctoral degree at UTSA must be admitted to
candidacy. In order to be admitted to candidacy, the student must comply
with the following requirements:
1. Fulfill the requirements for unconditional admission as a graduate
degree-seeking student, which entails the removal of any conditions
assigned at the time of admission.
2. Satisfy any special admission requirements established for the
degree program.
3. Be in good standing.
4. Pass a qualifying examination (written, oral, or both) prepared by
the Graduate Program Committee and meet any other requirements
specified by the Graduate Program Committee for the specific degree
program.
5. Submit a proposed program of study.
6. Upon satisfying the above requirements, be recommended for
admission to candidacy by the appropriate Graduate Program
Committee, which in the case of interdisciplinary programs is a
committee appointed by the Graduate School, consisting of no
fewer than five members of the Graduate Faculty, with at least one
representative from each of the disciplines included in the program.
7. Having satisfied the above requirements, be approved for admission
to candidacy by the academic College and the Dean of the Graduate
School.
30
Qualifying Examination
All students seeking a doctoral degree must pass a qualifying
examination. This examination consists of questions to test the
candidates knowledge and command of the major field. An examination
covering support work is not a University-wide requirement, but it may
be required at the discretion of the Graduate Program Committee or the
Dissertation Committee.
Dissertation Committee
Upon admission to candidacy and in consultation with the Graduate
Advisor of Record, the student selects their supervising professor
with that professors consent. Upon recommendation of the Graduate
Program Committee and the academic College, the Graduate School
appoints the Dissertation Committee. The committee must consist of at
least four members, including the supervising professor who consults
with other members of the committee as work proceeds. A majority of the
dissertation committee must consist of graduate faculty or adjoint faculty
in the student's program.
The Dissertation Committee advises the student on the research and
writing of the dissertation, conducts the final oral examination, and
approves the dissertation. The chair of the Dissertation Committee
ordinarily serves as the supervisor of research. Other members of the
committee should be consulted as appropriate. Occasionally, a research
professor or researcher who is not a member of the Graduate Faculty
may be recommended by the Graduate Program Committee to serve
as the supervisor for a specific dissertation because his or her expertise
would be valuable to the student. When the research supervisor is not a
member of the Graduate Faculty in the students area of study, a member
of the Graduate Program Committee will be appointed as co-chair of the
Dissertation Committee. The chair of the Dissertation Committee must be
a member of the Graduate Faculty for that graduate program. Changes
to the Dissertation Committee require documentation to be signed by
31
the Department Chair, the Dean of the College, and the Dean of the
Graduate School and must be received by the Graduate School.
In addition to recommending the students final program of study to the
Graduate Program Committee and supervising the research and writing
of the dissertation, the Dissertation Committee certifies to the academic
College and the Graduate School that all degree requirements have been
fulfilled.
Doctoral Dissertation
A dissertation is required of every candidate and must be an original
contribution to scholarship, based on independent investigation in
the major area. It must be approved by the Dissertation Committee.
Registration for the dissertation must be for a period of more than
one semester. During each semester or term that a student receives
advice and/or assistance from a faculty member or supervision by the
Dissertation Committee or uses University resources, they are required to
enroll in the appropriate dissertation course.
6. Graduate Program
Requirements and
Course Descriptions
College of Architecture, Construction and
Planning
32
Department of Architecture
Master of Architecture Degree - The Professional Program (p. 38)
Master of Science Degree in Architecture The Research Program
(p. 38)
Graduate Certificate in Historic Preservation (p. 40)
College of Business
Master of Business Administration Degree (p. 46)
Master of Business Administration Degree Business of Health
Concentration (p. 46)
Department of Management
Master of Business Administration Degree Entrepreneurship
Concentration (p. 73)
Doctor of Philosophy Degree in Business Administration with an
Emphasis in Organization and Management Studies (p. 73)
Department of Accounting
Five-Year (150-Hour) Professional Accounting Program (p. 52)
Master of Accountancy Degree (p. 52)
Doctor of Philosophy Degree in Business Administration with an
Emphasis in Accounting (p. 52)
Department of Economics
Master of Business Administration Degree Business Economics
Concentration (p. 56)
Master of Arts degree in Economics Degree (p. 56)
General Economics Concentration
Financial Economics Concentration
Business Data Analysis and Forecasting Concentration
Department of Finance
Master of Business Administration Degree (p. 60)
Finance Concentration
Real Estate Finance and Development Concentration
Master of Science Degree in Finance (p. 60)
Real Estate Finance and Development Concentration
Doctor of Philosophy Degree in Business Administration with an
Emphasis in Finance (p. 60)
Graduate Certificate in Real Estate Finance (p. 62)
Department of Marketing
Master of Business Administration Degree Marketing Management
Concentration (p. 85)
Doctor of Philosophy Degree in Business Administration with an
Emphasis in Marketing (p. 85)
Department of Counseling
Master of Science in Clinical Mental Health Counseling (p. 94)
Master of Education in School Counseling (p. 94)
Doctor of Philosophy in Counselor Education and Supervision
(p. 94)
33
Department of Communication
Master of Arts Degree in Communication (p. 185)
Department of English
College of Engineering
Department of Biomedical Engineering
Master of Science in Biomedical Engineering (p. 135)
Doctor of Philosophy in Biomedical Engineering (p. 135)
Department of History
Master of Arts Degree in History (p. 193)
Department of Music
Master of Music Degree (p. 200)
Graduate Certificate in Keyboard Pedagogy (p. 201)
Graduate Certificate in Keyboard Performance (p. 201)
Graduate Certificate in Voice Pedagogy (p. 201)
Department of Psychology
Master of Science Degree in Psychology (p. 215)
Doctor of Philosophy Degree in Psychology (p. 215)
Department of Sociology
Master of Science Degree in Sociology (p. 220)
Department of Demography
Doctor of Philosophy Degree in Applied Demography (p. 226)
College of Sciences
Department of Biology
Master of Science Degree in Biology (p. 241)
Master of Science Degree in Biotechnology (p. 241)
Master of Science Degree in Environmental Science (p. 251)
Doctor of Philosophy Degree in Biology (p. 241)
Environmental Science
Master of Science Degree in Environmental Science (p. 251)
Doctor of Philosophy Degree in Environmental Science and
Engineering (p. 251)
Department of Chemistry
Master of Science Degree in Chemistry (p. 256)
Doctor of Philosophy Degree in Chemistry (p. 256)
Department of Mathematics
Master of Science Degree in Mathematics (p. 272)
Master of Science Degree in Mathematics Education (p. 272)
Master of Science Degree in Applied MathematicsIndustrial
Mathematics (p. 272)
34
College of Architecture,
Construction and
Planning
The College of Architecture, Construction and Planning offers the
following graduate degrees and certificates:
Master of Architecture Degree - The Professional Program
Degree Requirements
The minimum number of semester credit hours required for the Master of
Science degree in Urban and Regional Planning, exclusive of coursework
or other study required to remove deficiencies is 48. Students may
pursue a thesis or nonthesis option.
Degree candidates must complete 48 semester credit hours of
coursework consisting of the following requirements:
A. 27 semester credit hours of the following required courses:
1. 18 semester credit hours of the following required courses:
URP 5323
URP 5333
URP 5343
URP 5363
URP 5393
URP 5453
Admission Requirements
Applicants must satisfy University-wide graduate admission requirements.
A complete application package consists of the following:
PAD 5473
PAD 5513
ARC 5423
ARC 6423
18
35
URP 5313
URP 5373
URP 5383
URP 5443
Community Development
URP 5433
Transportation Planning
URP 5463
URP 5473
36
To satisfy the major area coursework for the urban policy and
management specialization, a student must complete 9 semester
credit hours from the following public administration courses from
the Department of Public Administration in the College of Public
Policy:
PAD 5003
URP 5333
PAD 5313
URP 5343
PAD 5323
PAD 5343
6
15
Courses
48
Admission Requirements
New and existing graduate students in good standing shall declare
the intent to seek the Certificate by requesting permission to enter and
complete the program. Students not currently enrolled in a graduate
program may apply according to UTSA admission requirements for
certificate programs (see Chapter 3, Certificate Programs, in this catalog).
The Certificate Program Coordinator may determine that a student
requires prerequisite background courses to adequately prepare for the
courses of the Graduate Certificate Program.
URP 5333. Intro to Urban & Regional Plng. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing or consent of instructor. An introduction
to planning for human needs as related to the physical layout and spatial
design of communities and regions. (Formerly ARC 5333. Credit cannot
be earned for both URP 5333 and ARC 5333.).
URP 5343. Hist & Thry of Urb & Rgnl Plng. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing or consent of instructor. A survey
of the history and theories of urban and regional planning. Includes
consideration of the values and ethics of the planning profession and
methods of participation. (Formerly ARC 5343. Credit cannot be earned
for both URP 5343 and ARC 5343.).
URP 5353. Struc & Func of Cities & Regns. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing or consent of instructor. A study of the
social, political, economic, and changing physical design, form, and
infrastructure of cities and regions. (Formerly ARC 5353. Credit cannot be
earned for both URP 5353 and ARC 5353.).
URP 5363. Urban Planning Methods I. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing or consent of instructor. Introduction
to research tools and methods used in planning. Topics include:
demographic and employment analysis and forecasting, visualization,
database graphics, and GIS for applications in urban and regional
planning. (Formerly ARC 5363. Credit cannot be earned for both URP
5363 and ARC 5363.) (Formerly titled Intermediate Urban Planning
Methods.).
URP 5373. Plng & Design of Suburbs. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing or consent of instructor. A survey of the
historical evolution and relationship between suburbs and central cities,
contemporary trends in suburban planning, and sustainable development
options. (Formerly ARC 5373. Credit cannot be earned for both URP
5373 and ARC 5373.).
37
38
Department of
Architecture
The Department of Architecture supports the education of future
professionals in the practice of architecture and interior design. The
graduate programs of the Department of Architecture are directed
to a terminal degree for qualification for professional licensure and
architectural study for post-professionals and allied professionals. For
its graduate programs, the Department and College of Architecture take
advantage of their unique location within downtown San Antonio, as well
as South Texas and the borderlands of the western United States and
Mexico.
39
semester credit hours) in length and is completed via an independentlyderived, research-informed design project.
ARC 5133
ARC 5173
Architectural Theory&Criticism
ARC 5193
ARC 5733
ARC 6126
ARC 6136
ARC 6146
ARC 6931
ARC 6996
Master's Project
ARC 5203
ARC 5533
ARC 5603
ARC 5713
Environ Arch/Sustainability
ARC 5813
ARC 6823
37
40
Department of Architecture
12
52
ARC 5156
ARC 5166
ARC 5176
Principles of Structures
ARC 5933
Structures
ARC 5943
ARC 5953
Environmental Systems
B. Performance Evaluation
Upon completion of preparatory studies, each student is subject
to a performance evaluation intended to determine readiness to
enter the M.Arch. 2 program sequence. The performance evaluation
format is determined by the M.Arch. Graduate Program Committee.
Normally, failure to pass the performance evaluation requires
additional coursework or other work to remedy deficiencies or areas
of weakness before entering the M.Arch. 2 program sequence.
C. M.Arch. 2 Program Sequence
Degree candidates must complete the 52 semester credit hours of
the M.Arch. 2 sequence.
52
91
Architectural Principles
ARC 5923
ARC 5003
ARC 5913
ARC 5623
39
ARC 5233
ARC 5403
ARC 5613
American Architecture
ARC 6003
ARC 6423
ARC 6433
Research Methods
ARC 6983
Master's Thesis
or ARC 6981
Master's Thesis
12
21
33
ARC 6433
Research Methods
ARC 6983
Master's Thesis
or ARC 6981
Master's Thesis
12
ARC 5713
Environ Arch/Sustainability
ARC 5733
ARC 5743
Bldg Perf/Modeling&Simulation
ARC 5753
Adv DaylightDesign&Analysis
ARC 5763
ARC 5773
9
33
ARC 6433
Research Methods
ARC 6983
Master's Thesis
or ARC 6981
Master's Thesis
12
ARC 5203
ARC 5423
ARC 6413
Preservation Technology
Admission Requirements
B. Comprehensive Examination
C. Required Concentration Electives (9 semester credit hours):
33
B. Comprehensive Examination
C. Required Concentration Electives (6 semester credit hours):
Comprehensive Examination
ARC 6323
B. Comprehensive Examination
41
42
Department of Architecture
ARC 6423
ARC 5403
ARC 5423
ARC 5613
American Architecture
ARC 6003
ARC 6413
Preservation Technology
ARC 6433
Research Methods
15
43
44
Department of Architecture
45
46
Department of Architecture
Department of
Construction Science
Construction Science and Management
(CSM)
Courses
CSM 5133. Construct Pract Global Setting. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Seminar dealing with national and international business and legal
environments in the construction industry. Topics include agreement
and delivery options, forms of construction, project procedures and
administration, liability, contract documents, and ethics.
CSM 5223. BIM for Const Management. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Advanced techniques used in development and management of Building
Information Models. Emphasis on constructability and management.
CSM 5243. Sustainable Const and Delivery. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Sustainability principles applied to design, construction and operation of
built environment. Emphasis on site management and constructability.
CSM 5413. Adv Topics: Construct Systems. (1-4) 3 Credit Hours.
The management of the construction process pertaining to large,
complex, and unique buildings. The management of sustainable
construction, adaptive use of existing buildings, and historic preservation
projects will be included. (Formerly ARC 5413. Credit cannot be earned
for both CSM 5413 and ARC 5413.).
CSM 5423. Adv Top in Proj Contr Sched. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Advanced techniques used in scheduling and planning processes in
construction project control, including resource allocations and schedule
recovery.
CSM 5433. Constrct Safety Plan & Mgt. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Current construction safety and health issues. Development of sitespecific plans and methodology to provide hazard reduction on job sites.
CSM 5633. Advanced Construction Mgmt. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: Consent of instructor. Organization and integration of
construction resources and activities to include consideration of ethical
practice, scheduling, methods of construction, project planning and
management, cost accounting, and personnel utilization.
CSM 6943. Construction Internship. (0-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisites: Graduate standing, 18 semester credit hours of graduate
work, and consent of instructor. Supervised full-time construction
work experience with public agencies or private companies. Individual
conferences and written reports required.
CSM 6951. Independent Study. (0-0) 1 Credit Hour.
Prerequisites: Graduate standing and permission in writing (form
available) of the instructor and the Graduate Advisor of Record.
Independent reading, research, discussion, and/or writing under the
direction of a faculty member. For students needing specialized work not
normally or not often available as part of the regular course offerings.
May be repeated for credit, but not more than 6 hours will apply to the
degree.
47
College of Business
48
Mission Statement
College-wide Programs
Department of Management
Department of Accounting
Five-Year (150-Hour) Professional Accounting Program
Master of Accountancy degree
Doctor of Philosophy degree in Business Administration with an
Emphasis in Accounting
Department of Economics
Master of Business Administration degree Business Economics
Concentration
Master of Arts degree in Economics General Economics
Concentration
Master of Arts degree in Economics Financial Economics
Concentration
Master of Arts degree in Economics Business Data Analysis and
Forecasting Concentration
Department of Finance
Master of Business Administration degree Finance Concentration
Master of Business Administration degree Real Estate Finance and
Development Concentration
Master of Science degree in Finance
Master of Science degree in Finance Real Estate Finance and
Development Concentration
Doctor of Philosophy degree in Business Administration with an
Emphasis in Finance
Graduate Certificate in Real Estate Finance
Department of Marketing
Master of Business Administration degree Marketing Management
Concentration
Doctor of Philosophy degree in Business Administration with an
Emphasis in Marketing
49
College of Business
ECO 5023
Managerial Economics
FIN 5023
Financial Management
MGT 5043
MGT 5253
MGT 5903
MKT 5023
Marketing Management
MS 5023
3
24
Degree Options
Students seeking the M.B.A. degree may elect one of three options to
complete the required 36 semester credit hours.
ACC 5003
BLW 5003
ECO 5003
IS 5003
MS 5003
ACC 5023
For admission to the M.B.A. program, applicants must meet Universitywide graduate admission requirements. Applicants are further considered
on the basis of demonstrated potential for success in graduate study in
business administration as indicated by a combination of prior academic
achievement, Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) scores,
personal statement, rsum (optional), and references (optional).
Degree Requirements
50
For admission to the E.M.B.A. program, applicants must meet Universitywide graduate admission requirements and the following College of
Business requirements:
A. Required courses
BOH 6763
BOH 6773
BOH 6123
or MGT 6123
B. Elective courses
Select one of the following:
BOH 6783
BOH 6553
or BLW 6553
BOH 6543
or ECO 6543
BOH 6133
or MGT 6133
BOH 6923
or MGT 6923
51
College of Business
Each student shall be responsible for payment of tuition and fees at each
institution at which the student is enrolled.
Required Courses
Students choosing the dual degree program must complete the 36
semester credit hours of M.B.A. coursework and the 45 semester credit
hours of M.P.H. coursework. However, under this integrated dual-degree
program, up to 12 semester credit hours of M.B.A. coursework can be
applied to the M.P.H. requirements, and up to 12 semester credit hours
of M.P.H. coursework can be applied to the M.B.A. requirements. These
shared-credit courses substantially reduce the total time required for
students to complete the programs, when compared with taking each of
the two degree programs separately.
Students should refer to The University of Texas School of Public Health
catalog (http://sph.uth.tmc.edu/campuses/san-antonio/) for M.P.H.
program admission and degree requirements.
Degree Requirements
The degree requires a minimum of 84 semester credit hours beyond the
bachelors degree. Candidates who enter the program with prior graduate
business coursework may be waived from some or all of the background
degree requirements in categories A, B, and C below, with approval from
the disciplines Doctoral Studies Committee.
No course for which a grade of less than C was earned can be applied
to the Doctoral degree program and no more than two courses with a
grade of C may be applied to the program.
Program of Study
A. M.B.A. Core Courses:
This requirement may be met by a masters degree in business
or business-related discipline. If a student does not have the
appropriate graduate degree, a minimum of three courses (9
semester credit hours) outside of the students major discipline must
be taken from the following list:
ACC 5023
ECO 5023
Managerial Economics
Admission Requirements
FIN 5023
Financial Management
MGT 5043
MGT 5253
MGT 5903
MKT 5023
Marketing Management
MS 5023
Microeconomic Theory
ECO 6103
ECO 6113
Mathematical Economics
GBA 7013
Research Methods I
GBA 7023
Research Methods II
MS 7033
STA 6923
STA 7013
STA 7023
STA 7033
12
The Graduate Certificate in the Business of Health is a 12-semestercredit-hour program designed to equip healthcare and business
professionals with the knowledge and skills needed to lead in todays
rapidly-changing healthcare environment. The influence of political,
social, legal, regulatory, environmental and technological issues on
healthcare management decisions is central to our practical, state-of-theart classes.
H. Doctoral Research
This requirement is met by doctoral research coursework.
Dissertation
52
I. Dissertation Research
The initial Program of Study must be approved by the Doctoral
Studies Committee and must be submitted to the Dean of the
Graduate School for final approval.
12
84-87
Advancement to Candidacy
Advancement to candidacy requires a student to complete University
and program requirements and to pass a written qualifying examination
following completion of course requirements in the candidates major
field of study. The examination is administered by the Doctoral Studies
Committee. No more than two attempts to pass qualifying examinations
are allowed. Results of the written and oral examinations must be
reported to the Doctoral Studies Committee, the Dean of the College, and
the Dean of the Graduate School. Admission into the doctoral program
does not guarantee advancement to candidacy.
or MGT 6123
BOH 6763
or ACC 6763
BOH 6773
or ACC 6773
or MGT 6133
BOH 6543
3
3
3
3
53
College of Business
or ECO 6543
BOH 6553
or BLW 6553
BOH 6783
or ACC 6783
BOH 6923
or MGT 6923
12
54
Department of
Accounting
Mission Statement
The mission of the Department of Accounting is to advance accounting
knowledge and practice through excellence in accounting education,
high-impact research, and relevant continuing education and professional
outreach activities that serve the constituents of the department in the
state, nation, and globally.
All graduate programs in Accounting are separately accredited by
AACSB InternationalThe Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of
Businessand conform to recommended guidelines.
Five-Year (150-Hour) Professional Accounting Program (p. 55)
Master of Accountancy Degree (p. 55)
Doctor of Philosophy Degree in Business Administration with an
Emphasis in Accounting (p. 56)
a personal statement
Admission Criteria
To be admitted to the Five-Year (150-Hour) Professional Accounting
Program, students must meet the following criteria:
1. be a declared accounting major
2. have an overall grade point average of 3.0, a grade point average
of 3.0 in accounting courses taken, and an acceptable score on the
Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT)
3. have completed a minimum of 6 semester credit hours of upper-level
undergraduate accounting courses including ACC 3023 Intermediate
Accounting I.
In addition, the student must have completed at least 12 semester credit
hours of upper-level undergraduate accounting courses by the end of the
first semester following admission into the program.
55
Principles of Accounting I
ACC 2033
Principles of Accounting II
ACC 3023
Intermediate Accounting I
ACC 3033
Intermediate Accounting II
ACC 3043
ACC 3113
ACC 4013
Principles of Auditing
BLW 3013
Business Law
ECO 2013
Introductory Macroeconomics
ECO 2023
Introductory Microeconomics
FIN 3014
IS 3003
MGT 3013
MKT 3013
Principles of Marketing
MS 3043
56
Department of Accounting
Degree Requirements
The minimum number of semester credit hours required for this degree,
exclusive of coursework or other study required to remove admission
deficiencies, is 30.
A. Theoretical Foundations
ACC 6003
ACC 6013
B. Disciplinary Focus
12 semester credit hours of graduate electives in accounting or
12
taxation, approved by the Coordinator of Graduate Programs in
Accounting. Students may choose to focus their graduate study in
one of four different areas through their choice of these 12 hours.
Focus areas include taxation, audit services, financial accounting and
managerial accounting. See the graduate advisors or the Coordinator
of Graduate Programs in Accounting to discuss these options.
C. Electives
9
D. Accounting Capstone
ACC 6993
30
12
ACC 7053
ACC 7113
ACC 7123
B. Directed Electives
ACC 7043
21
57
58
Department of Accounting
59
Department of
Economics
Mission Statement
The mission of the Department of Economics at The University of
Texas at San Antonio is to offer courses and degree programs at both
the undergraduate and graduate levels that provide students with the
opportunity to gain the necessary theoretical and quantitative tools in
economics such that they can understand and apply economics in their
daily lives, seek advanced degrees in economics, pursue careers in the
global marketplace, and engage in public policy-making. It is also the
mission of the department to provide an environment for its faculty and
students to engage in research that will further the understanding of
economics and enhance the reputation of the Department, the College of
Business, and the University.
Macroeconomic Issues
ECO 6103
60
For admission to the M.A.E. program, applicants must meet Universitywide graduate admission requirements. Applicants are further considered
on the basis of potential for success in graduate study in economics
as indicated by a combination of records in the applicants application
package, including:
a completed application form
transcripts from all universities attended
official Graduate Record Examination (GRE) or Graduate
Management Admission Test (GMAT) scores
letters of reference
a statement of purpose
The Economics Graduate Admissions Committee evaluates each
applicant individually based on the stated records. Accepted students
are required to have completed an undergraduate degree before the
start of the Masters program. Importantly, all graduate students are
expected to meet the foundation requirements which represent three
bodies of knowledge that need to be acquired prior to entering the
program. Whether a student meets the foundation requirements is most
likely to be determined by the courses taken in his/her previous studies.
Students who are admitted to the program but do not meet the foundation
requirements are required to make up the foundation requirements
(mandated by the Economics Admission Graduate Committee) prior to or
during the first year of the program.
Foundation Requirements
The three foundation areas are:
Economic Theory: Undergraduate level of economic theory, including
Intermediate Microeconomics and Intermediate Macroeconomics
Mathematics: An ability to apply calculus and linear algebra to
equilibrium and optimization models in economics
Statistics: A basic knowledge of statistics, including hypothesis
testing, sampling and probability distribution
Degree Requirements. Students must complete 33 semester credit
hours and a comprehensive examination.
Students must earn 12 of the 33 semester credit hours from the core
courses required for the program. These remaining 21 semester credit
hours may include the credits that students can earn from an internship
and a directed research project or a Master's Thesis.
Internships. Students are encouraged to pursue an internship (in the
U.S. or overseas) that would substitute for an elective course (3 semester
credit hours) upon approval by the Graduate Advisor.
Directed Research Project. Students are encouraged to undertake a
research project in their area of concentration. To do so, students confer
with a faculty advisor with whom they share a specific research interest to
develop practical and relevant ideas for research that can be conducted
as a course of independent study and substitute for an elective course (3
semester credit hours).
Master's Thesis. The Masters Thesis option requires previous
outstanding research and coursework. This option allows students to
take the last two semesters of the program to write the thesis. The option
61
Department of Economics
12
ECO 6573
ECO 6583
ECO 6951
Independent Study
ECO 6953
Independent Study
ECO 6943
Economics Internship
ECO 6971
Special Topics
ECO 6973
Special Topics
ECO 6983
Masters Thesis
Microeconomic Theory
ECO 6033
Macroeconomic Issues
ECO 6103
ECO 6113
Mathematical Economics
ECO 6013
Microeconomic Theory
ECO 6033
Macroeconomic Issues
ECO 6103
ECO 6403
ECO 6113
Mathematical Economics
ECO 6583
FIN 5023
Financial Management
FIN 5733
FIN 6313
12
15
Financial Economics
ECO 6303
Applied Econometrics
ECO 6323
ECO 6303
Applied Econometrics
ECO 6543
ECO 6323
ECO 6553
ECO 6403
Financial Economics
ECO 6573
ECO 6543
ECO 6943
Economics Internship
ECO 6553
ECO 6951
Independent Study
ECO 6203
33
ECO 6953
Independent Study
ECO 6971
Special Topics
ECO 6973
Special Topics
62
33
Courses
33
Microeconomic Theory
ECO 6033
Macroeconomic Issues
ECO 6103
ECO 6113
Mathematical Economics
Applied Econometrics
ECO 6583
MKT 5063
STA 6033
STA 6923
ECO 6323
ECO 6403
Financial Economics
ECO 6543
ECO 6553
ECO 6573
ECO 6943
Economics Internship
ECO 6951
Independent Study
ECO 6953
Independent Study
ECO 6971
Special Topics
ECO 6973
Special Topics
12
15
63
Department of Economics
64
Department of Finance
All graduate programs in Finance are accredited by AACSB International
The Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Businessand
conform to recommended guidelines.
Master of Business Administration Degree Finance Concentration
(p. 65)
Master of Business Administration Degree Real Estate Finance and
Development Concentration (p. 65)
Master of Science Degree in Finance General Option (p. 65)
9
12
FIN 5423
FIN 5443
FIN 5453
Degree Requirements
FIN 5633
65
12
Degree Options
Students seeking the M.S.F. degree may elect one of two options to
complete the required 33 semester credit hours; M.S.F. General Option,
or M.S.F. Real Estate Finance Concentration.
MS 5023
66
Department of Finance
FIN 5023
Financial Management
FIN 5633
FIN 5633
FIN 6313
FIN 6313
FIN 5403
FIN 5423
FIN 5443
FIN 5453
FIN 5723
FIN 5733
FIN 5813
Corporate Valuation
FIN 5823
Corporate Restructuring
FIN 5833
FIN 5853
FIN 5943
FIN 6213
FIN 6223
FIN 6903
FIN 6943
Finance Internship
FIN 6953
Independent Study
FIN 6973
Special Problems
FIN 5723
FIN 5733
FIN 5813
Corporate Valuation
FIN 5823
Corporate Restructuring
FIN 5833
FIN 5853
FIN 5943
FIN 6213
FIN 6223
FIN 6903
FIN 6943
Finance Internship
FIN 6953
Independent Study
FIN 6973
Special Problems
MOT 5243
FIN 5033
33
33
MS 5023
Financial Management
FIN 5403
FIN 5423
FIN 5443
FIN 5453
FIN 7013
Financial Theory
FIN 7023
Corporate Finance
FIN 7033
Valuation
FIN 7043
Empirical Finance
FIN 7113
12
21
FIN 5423
FIN 5443
FIN 5453
3
12
67
Courses
FIN 5013. Foundations of Finance for Entrepreneurs. (3-0) 3 Credit
Hours.
The course develops strategies for managing the growth of a company
through various phases of its life cycle. Topics include forecasting
financial requirements, alternative sources of financing, management of
operations and capital investment. Credit for FIN 5013 cannot be applied
toward degree programs that require FIN 5023.
FIN 5023. Financial Management. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisites: ACC 5003, ECO 5003, or their equivalents. Completion of
or concurrent enrollment in ACC 5023 is required. The study of concepts
related to the financial management of the firm. Topics include asset
and liability management, capital investment analysis and valuation, risk
and uncertainty, sources and costs of financial alternatives, corporate
financial policy, and other corporate financial management topics.
FIN 5033. Cases in Financial Management. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: FIN 5023 or an equivalent. A case approach will be used to
illustrate the applications of financial management to business situations
and to integrate topical areas. Primary areas of focus include planning,
current asset management, capital budgeting, mergers and acquisitions,
risk management, and financing alternatives.
FIN 5403. Real Estate Principles. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite or corequisite: FIN 5023. This course provides an overview
of the discipline of real estate including both residential and commercial
real estate. Topics may include the lease/buy decision, legal and industry
aspects of the real estate sector, an overview of real estate capital
markets, an introduction to debt and equity financing for real estate,
principles of real estate investment decision-making, underwriting
real estate transactions, and an introduction to public and private real
estate. If enrolled in the Graduate Certificate in Real Estate Finance and
Development, the prerequisite for this course is FIN 5013 or FIN 5023
with score of "B-" or higher or consent of program advisor.
FIN 5423. Real Estate Finance and Investment. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: FIN 5403. This course builds upon the principles of FIN
5403 to further study investment and finance concepts applied to real
estate lending, development and valuation of real property. Topics may
include the primary and secondary mortgage markets, construction
and development financing, lender loan analysis, an introduction to the
legal aspects of real property lending, and an overview of real estate
investment trusts. The course also examines the major concepts and
analytical methods useful for making real estate investment and finance
decisions relating to individual and portfolios of properties. It builds upon
the modern corporate finance perspective and treats property as one
particular class of capital assets.
68
Department of Finance
69
70
Department of Finance
Department of
Information Systems
and Cyber Security
All graduate programs in Information Systems and Cyber Security
are accredited by AACSB InternationalThe Association to Advance
Collegiate Schools of Businessand conform to recommended
guidelines.
Master of Business Administration Degree Cyber Security
Concentration (p. 71)
Master of Business Administration Degree Information Systems
Concentration (p. 71)
Master of Business Administration Degree Management of
Technology Concentration (p. 71)
Master of Business Administration Degree Project Management
Concentration (p. 72)
Master of Science Degree in Information Technology (p. 72)
Master of Science Degree in Information Technology Cyber
Security Concentration (p. 73)
Master of Science Degree in Management of Technology (p. 73)
Doctor of Philosophy Degree in Business Administration with an
Emphasis in Information Technology (p. 74)
Information Technology
IS 5193
IS 5203
Telecommunication Systems
IS 6303
IS 6323
IS 6343
IS 6353
IS 6363
Computer Forensics
IS 6373
Cyber Law
IS 6383
IS 6423
71
IS 6433
IS 6703
IS 5143
Information Technology
IS 5193
IS 5203
Telecommunication Systems
IS 6103
IS 6303
IS 6323
IS 6343
IS 6353
IS 6363
Computer Forensics
IS 6373
Cyber Law
IS 6383
IS 6403
IS 6423
IS 6433
IS 6503
IS 6703
IS 6813
72
A. Required courses
MOT 5163
Management of Technology
a personal statement
MOT 5223
B. Elective courses
Students must complete an additional 6 semester credit hours of
graduate Management of Technology courses.
Degree Requirements
Candidates for the degree of Master of Science in Information
Technology (M.S.I.T.) must complete the following:
MOT 5243
B. Elective courses
IS 5143
Information Technology
IS 5203
Telecommunication Systems
IS 6813
Software Engineering
CS 5443
CS 6543
Networks
CS 6553
Performance Evaluation
IS 5113
IS 5193
IS 6103
IS 6303
IS 6323
IS 6343
IS 6353
IS 6363
Computer Forensics
IS 6373
Cyber Law
IS 6503
IS 6703
For admission to the M.S.I.T. program, applicants must meet Universitywide graduate admission requirements. Applicants are further considered
on the basis of demonstrated potential for success in graduate study in
information technology as indicated by a combination of prior academic
achievement, Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) scores,
personal statement, rsum (optional), and references (optional).
The M.S.I.T. Graduate Program Committee evaluates each applicant
individually based on the complete package of submitted materials.
A complete application package will include:
a completed application form
transcripts from all universities attended
18
IS 6383
IS 6403
IS 6423
IS 6433
MGT 5093
Leadership
33
IS 6383
73
IS 6423
IS 6433
IS 6953
Independent Study
Degree Requirements
Information Technology
IS 5203
Telecommunication Systems
IS 6303
IS 6323
IS 6813
IS 6363
Computer Forensics
IS 6373
Cyber Law
33
For admission to the M.S. MOT program, the ideal applicant should
have an undergraduate or graduate degree in a scientific, engineering,
mathematical, or other technology-based discipline from an accredited
university or college and meet University-wide graduate admission
requirements. In addition, the Graduate Programs Committee evaluates
each applicant individually, based on a combination of five factors:
IS 6353
Leadership
MGT 5093
IS 6343
MGT 5043
12
Degree Requirements
Students must successfully complete 33 semester credit hours and a
comprehensive examination.
A. All candidates are required to successfully complete the following
21 semester credit hours:
MOT 5053
Technology Commercialization
MOT 5163
Management of Technology
MOT 5223
MOT 5243
MOT 5313
Emerging Technologies
MOT 5343
MOT 6203
3
12
33
74
IS 7023
IS 7033
IS 7043
9
21
Technology Commercialization
MOT 5243
MOT 5253
MOT 5343
12
75
76
77
78
Department of
Management
MGT 7043
Foundations of Strategy
MGT 7073
MGT elective
3
21
Entrepreneurship
FIN 5853
B. Elective courses
79
MGT 7023
MGT 7033
80
Department of Management
81
82
Department of Management
Department of
Management Science
and Statistics
Mission Statement
The mission of the Department of Management Science and Statistics
is to offer both undergraduate and graduate educational programs that
are of high quality and meet the changing needs of the global community;
to provide a supportive learning environment for students; to foster the
success of our students in their professional careers; and to create an
academic environment that stresses excellence in teaching, intellectual
contributions, and service. The Department contributes to the field of
knowledge through research and education in the quantitative sciences.
Theory and analysis are applied to a variety of interdisciplinary problems
to discover new approaches for meeting the challenges of decision
making in a global arena of expanding technology and information.
Department Information
The disciplines of Management Science and Statistics are integral
to modern decision-making processes. These interdisciplinary fields
emphasize the use of quantitative methods and computers for analyzing,
understanding, visualizing, and interpreting data. Management Science
seeks to provide a rational basis for decision analysis across a broad
spectrum of business functions such as production/operations, marketing,
finance, human resources, project management, logistics, and supply
chain management. Statistical methods provide analytical tools for
research in high-technology and biomedical industries, insurance, and
government agencies. For students choosing to obtain a Master of
Business Administration degree, the Department of Management Science
and Statistics offers a concentration in Management Science. The
Department also offers a Master of Science degree in Applied Statistics
and a Doctor of Philosophy degree in Applied Statistics.
Master of Business Administration Degree Management Science
Concentration (p. 83)
Master of Science Degree in Applied Statistics (p. 83)
Doctor of Philosophy Degree in Applied Statistics (p. 84)
83
MS 5323
MS 5333
MS 5343
MS 5373
MS 5393
MS 5413
MS 5423
MS 5433
MS 5353
MS 5453
MS 5463
MS 5473
MS 5493
MS 6943
MS 6953
Independent Study
MS 6973
Special Problems
84
Degree Requirements
Candidates for this degree are required to successfully complete 33
semester credit hours as specified below:
STA 5093
STA 5103
Applied Statistics
STA 5503
Mathematical Statistics I
STA 5513
Mathematical Statistics II
STA 6033
STA 6233
Biostatistics:
STA 6133
STA 6413
Nonparametric Statistics
STA 6813
Multivariate Analysis
STA 6833
STA 6853
STA 6863
Spatial Statistics
STA 6903
Survival Analysis
STA 6913
STA 6923
Industrial Statistics:
STA 5803
STA 6013
Regression Analysis
STA 6113
STA 6133
STA 6833
STA 6843
Management Science:
MS 5023
MS 5453
MS 5463
STA 6013
Regression Analysis
STA 6133
Financial Modeling:
ECO 6103
STA 6013
Regression Analysis
STA 6113
STA 6133
STA 6253
MS 5323
MS 5353
STA 6013
Regression Analysis
STA 6253
STA 6813
Multivariate Analysis
STA 6923
FIN 6313
33
85
15
87
Degree Requirements
Candidates for this degree are required to successfully complete
a minimum of 87 semester credit hours of graduate coursework as
specified below:
A. Foundation Courses
All candidates entering the program with only a bachelors degree or
with a non-quantitative masters degree must complete the following
18 semester credit hours of coursework:
STA 5093
STA 5103
Applied Statistics
STA 5503
Mathematical Statistics I
STA 5513
Mathematical Statistics II
STA 6033
STA 6233
STA 6713
Linear Models
STA 6993
Statistical Consulting
STA 7503
Advanced Inference I
STA 7513
Advanced Inference II
15
Advancement to Candidacy
Advancement to candidacy requires a student to complete University and
Applied Statistics program requirements. After completing the required
coursework, all candidates for the Ph.D. degree must pass written
qualifying examinations and oral defense of dissertation proposal before
being admitted to candidacy for the degree. Students admitted with a
bachelors degree must pass the Masters comprehensive examination.
However, those who do not pass the qualifying examination at the
Ph.D. level may qualify for the M.S. degree. The written examination is
administered by the graduate faculty in the specialization area. Written
examinations are scheduled once a year, whereas the oral proposal
defense is administered at the discretion of the students Dissertation
Committee. The oral defense is for the purpose of eliminating any
questions of competency related to substantive written exams and
serves as a hearing for the students dissertation proposal. Students will
be provided no more than two attempts to pass the written qualifying
examination and two attempts to pass the oral proposal defense
examination. Majority approval of the dissertation examination committee
is required to pass the oral proposal defense. Results of the written
and oral qualifying examinations must be reported to the Dean of the
Graduate School.
Dissertation
Candidates must demonstrate the ability to conduct independent
research by completing and defending an original dissertation. The
research topic is determined by the student in consultation with his or her
supervising professor. A Dissertation Committee selected by the student
and supervising professor, guides and critiques the candidates research.
The completed dissertation must be formally presented to and approved
by the Dissertation Committee.
Following an open presentation of the dissertation findings, the
Dissertation Committee conducts a closed meeting to determine the
adequacy of the research and any further requirements for completion of
the dissertation. Results of the meeting must be reported to the Dean of
the College and to the Dean of the Graduate School.
Awarding of the degree is based on the approval of the Dissertation
Committee, and the approval of the Dean of the College. The UTSA
Dean of the Graduate School certifies the completion of all Universitywide requirements.
86
MS 5353
MS 5393
MS 5423
MS 5433
MS 5453
MS 5463
MS 5473
12
87
88
89
90
91
Department of Marketing
All graduate programs in Marketing are accredited by AACSB
InternationalThe Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of
Businessand conform to recommended guidelines.
Master of Business Administration Degree Marketing Management
Concentration (p. 92)
Doctor of Philosophy Degree in Business Administration with an
Emphasis in Marketing (p. 92)
MKT 7023
Behavioral Seminar I
MKT 7033
Behavioral Seminar II
MKT 7043
Courses
MKT 5063
92
9
21
93
Department of Marketing
94
College of Education
and HumanDevelopment
The College of Education and Human Development offers the following
graduate degrees and certificate programs:
Master of Arts degree in Bicultural-Bilingual Studies (p.88)
Master of Arts degree in Education (p. 119)
Master of Arts degree in School Psychology (p. 123)
Master of Arts degree in Teaching English as a Second Language (p. 88)
Master of Dietetics Studies (p. 114)
Master of Education degree in Educational Leadership and Policy Studies (p. 101)
Master of Education degree in School Counseling (p. 94)
Master of Science degree in Clinical Mental Health Counseling (p. 94)
Master of Science degree in Health and Kinesiology (p. 114)
Doctor of Education degree in Educational Leadership (p. 101)
Doctor of Philosophy degree in Counselor Education and Supervision (p. 94)
Doctor of Philosophy degree in Culture, Literacy and Language (p. 88)
Doctor of Philosophy degree in Interdisciplinary Learning and Teaching (p. 119)
Graduate Certificate in Applied Behavior Analysis (p. 124)
Graduate Certificate in Bilingual Reading Specialist (p. 101)
Graduate Certificate in Higher Education Administration (p. 117)
Graduate Certificate in Language Acquisition and Bilingual Psychoeducational Assessment (p. 125)
Graduate Certificate in Teaching English as a Second Language (p. 101)
95
Department of
Bicultural-Bilingual
Studies
The Department of Bicultural-Bilingual Studies offers graduate
certificates in Bilingual Reading Specialist and Teaching English as
a Second Language (CertTESL), and three graduate degrees: the
Master of Arts degree in Bicultural-Bilingual Studies, the Master of Arts
degree in Teaching English as a Second Language (TESL), and the
Doctor of Philosophy degree in Culture, Literacy and Language. For
individuals seeking Texas Teacher Certification, the Department offers
concentrations for Bilingual Generalist EC-6 and ESL Generalist EC-6.
Master of Arts Degree in Bicultural-Bilingual Studies (p. 96)
Master of Arts Degree in Teaching English as a Second Language
(p. 98)
Doctor of Philosophy Degree in Culture, Literacy and Language
(p. 99)
Degree Requirements
Degree candidates must complete the following:
BBL 5013
BBL 5023
BBL 5123
BBL 5133
BBL 6223
Degree Requirements
Degree candidates are required to complete successfully a 36-semestercredit-hour program. Upon completion of at least 30 semester credit
hours of coursework, the candidate is required to pass a written and oral
comprehensive examination.
Candidates for the concentration in Bicultural-Bilingual Teacher
Education must demonstrate proficiency in a second language.
Candidates for the concentration in Bicultural Studies are required to give
evidence of second language learning experiences acceptable to the
departments Graduate Program Committee.
96
BBL 5063
BBL 5193
BBL 6043
ESL 5053
ESL 5063
B. Electives
6 semester credit hours of graduate elective coursework in BiculturalBilingual Studies, English as a Second Language, or in approved
related areas.
Total Credit Hours
36
3-6
97
BBL 5003
Degree Requirements
BBL 5013
BBL 5023
BBL 5133
BBL 6223
3-6
BBL 5063
BBL 5173
BBL 5193
BBL 6043
BBL 6063
BBL 6073
ESL 6013
Socio-Cultural Studies:
Select 6 hours from the following courses:
BBL 5003
BBL 5013
BBL 5023
BBL 5123
BBL 5133
BBL 6223
BBL 5193
Bilingual Teaching:
BBL 5033
BBL 5063
B. Masters Thesis
36
BBL 5053
BBL 6043
ESL 5053
ESL 5063
Internship/Practicum:
6 semester credit hours of internship/practicum:
C&I 6943
36
Degree Requirements
Degree candidates must complete the following 36 semester credit hours
of coursework:
A. Required coursework. 30 semester credit hours of coursework
from four major areas as follows:
Sociocultural Foundations:
BBL 5003
3
9
BBL 5023
BBL 5133
BBL 6033
BBL 6093
BBL 6223
HIS 5263
HIS 5313
HIS 5323
HIS 5423
Colonial Mexico
HIS 5433
Modern Mexico
HIS 6173
AHC 5843
AHC 5853
BBL 5043
Ethnography of Communication
BBL 5093
BBL 5123
BBL 5193
SPN 5473
SPN 5483
SPN 5803
SPN 5853
Degree Requirements
Degree candidates are required to successfully complete a 36-semestercredit-hour program. Upon completion of at least 30 semester credit
hours of coursework, the candidate is required to pass a comprehensive
examination.
Students must take at least 21 semester credit hours of English as a
Second Language courses and 9 hours of Bicultural-Bilingual studies
courses. An internship is required: students who can document relevant
teaching experience may petition to substitute an elective for the
internship. The Masters degree is offered under two options: thesis and
nonthesis.
Degree candidates must complete the following 36 semester credit hours
of coursework:
BBL 6003
BBL 6073
3
6
Research Foundations:
98
ESL 5003
ESL 5013
BBL 5053
ESL 6943
ESL 5053
or ESL 5063
99
ESL 5043
Degree Requirements
The TESL-C program consists of 36 semester credit hours
(12 graduate courses), plus some additional learning
modules and practice teaching (see the TESL-C Degree
Information Sheet (http://education.utsa.edu/DEGREES/article/
Master_of_Arts_in_Teaching_English_as_a_Second_Language__EC-6_ESL_Generali) on the COEHD website).
ESL 5073
ESL 5083
Pedagogical Grammar
ESL 6043
ESL 6053
ESL 6063
Research:
Select 6 hours from the following:
BBL 5123
ESL 5003
ESL 5013
BBL 6063
or BBL 6073
Classroom Practice:
ESL 6013
ESL 5033
ESL 5053
ESL 5063
BBL 5053
BBL 5013
BBL 5023
BBL 5043
Ethnography of Communication
BBL 6103
ESL 5073
BBL 6223
ESL 5083
Pedagogical Grammar
BBL 5173
BBL 5193
C&I 5043
ECE 6363
Research:
36
BBL 6063
36
EDU 7043
Degree Requirements
The Doctoral degree requires a minimum of 60 semester credit hours
beyond the masters degree. The CLL foundational curriculum consists
of 24 semester credit hours of required coursework (foundation, core,
and designated electives). A minimum of 12 semester credit hours in
research methods and 15 semester credit hours in doctoral research
must be completed. The remaining 9 semester credit hours consist of
elective courses selected with advisors approval.
BBL 7123
BBL 7133
BBL 7213
Ethnological Theory
BBL 7113
BBL 7203
BBL 7223
BBL 7233
BBL 7243
BBL 7253
Ethnography of Communication
BBL 5123
BBL 6043
BBL 6073
BBL 6093
BBL 6223
BBL 6233
BBL 7083
ESL 5073
ESL 6013
Program of Study
F. Doctoral Research:
A. Foundation Course:
Proseminar in Culture, Literacy and Language
C. Core Courses
BBL 7003
100
BBL 7023
BBL 7043
BBL 7303
BBL 7313
3
12
60
101
Qualifying Examination
Students, in consultation with their Academic Advisor, will submit the
names of three faculty members representing the areas of culture,
literacy, and language to the Doctoral Studies Committee for approval.
The approved Qualifying Examination Committee will design, administer,
and evaluate a two-part (written and oral) examination. The written
portion of the examination covers the areas completed in all foundation,
core, and designated elective courses and cannot be taken until after the
completion of 36 semester credit hours. In order to pass this examination,
the student must demonstrate a broad knowledge of culture, literacy,
and language. The oral portion of the examination takes place within two
weeks of the written portion and focuses on clarifying the students ideas
from the written portion. The purpose of the examination is to ensure that
the student has a sufficient grasp of the theoretical and methodological
fundamentals to conduct independent research in the chosen dissertation
area. No more than two attempts to pass qualifying examinations are
allowed.
Dissertation Committee
Upon successful completion of the Qualifying Examination, the student
is eligible to defend his/her dissertation proposal. In preparation for the
dissertation research, the student will identify a Dissertation Chair. The
research topic will be determined by the student in consultation with their
supervising professor. A Dissertation Committee of four members
selected by the student and their Dissertation Chairmust be approved
by the Doctoral Studies Committee and Graduate School prior to the
proposal hearing/defense.
Dissertation Proposal
The approved Dissertation Committee will guide and critique the students
dissertation proposal. The student should give a complete draft of
the dissertation proposal to the Supervising Professor (Dissertation
Chair) one month before the proposal hearing/defense and to the other
committee members at least three weeks in advance. The proposal
hearing/defense must be advertised to the University community two
weeks prior to the set date. Upon successful defense of the proposal, and
before conducting the study, the student must secure UTSA Institutional
Review Board (IRB) approval for any dissertation research that involves
human subjects.
Advancement to Candidacy
Advancement to candidacy will require a student to complete all
University and program requirements:
Have an approved program of study
Pass written and oral qualifying examinations
Select a supervising professor and Dissertation Committee
Successfully defend a dissertation proposal before the Dissertation
Committee
Secure approval of appropriate human subjects research forms.
BBL 5063
BBL 5173
BBL 5193
ESL 5033
15
B. Language Skills:
ESL 5043
ESL 6043
ESL 6063
ESL 5063
ESL 5073
ESL 5083
Pedagogical Grammar
D. Practicum:
ESL 6943
3
15
102
103
104
BBL 7013. Research Design and Statistics for Culture, Literacy and
Language. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: An introductory course in statistics. Research design for
quantitative studies in culture, literacy, and language. Topics include
formulating testable hypotheses, collecting data on linguistic and cultural
variables, selecting appropriate statistical models, and interpreting
results. Special attention to the procedures commonly used in studies of
language development and language variation, including parametric and
nonparametric models.
BBL 7023. Qualitative Research Methods for Culture, Literacy and
Language. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Overview of qualitative research methodologies and applied social
science techniques for conducting research in both educational and
non-educational settings. Exploration of epistemological and intellectual
controversies in qualitative research. Emphasis on practical applications
of research methods and techniques to design and carry out qualitative
studies.
BBL 7033. Seminar in Advanced Research Methods. (3-0) 3 Credit
Hours.
Prerequisites: BBL 5123 or an equivalent, and BBL 7023. Field research
methods in linguistically diverse communities, with particular attention
to discourse analytic approaches. Emphasis on collection, reduction,
and analysis of language data. Special attention to procedures and
discourse analytic techniques commonly used to examine language in
use, in multilingual contexts. Consideration of ethical issues in research
in minority communities. May be repeated for credit when topics vary.
(Formerly titled Seminar in Discourse Analysis.).
BBL 7043. Research Design and Qualitative Analysis for Culture,
Literacy and Language. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: BBL 7023. Enhances doctoral research proposals from
formulation of the research questions, appropriate methods for collection,
construction of a conceptual literature review, analysis of data, and
determining findings. Provides theory and techniques for analyzing
qualitative data sets. Diverse theoretical frameworks will be used to
analyze the data sets required from students. May include use of
qualitative computer software.
BBL 7083. Technology for Qualitative Research. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Exploration of the effective use of technology to facilitate data collection,
organization, and analysis. Emphasis on application of theoreticallybased methodologies for handling and analyzing qualitative data through
the use of qualitative research software. Course also includes attention
to other hardware or software relevant to the collection, organization and
analysis of qualitative data, such as digital audio and video recording
equipment and transcribing software and bibliographic software. Most
effective for graduate students who have completed a qualitative
methodology course and who have already begun the collection of
qualitative research data.
BBL 7113. Seminar in Cultural Studies Research. (3-0) 3 Credit
Hours.
Prerequisite: Consent of instructor. Interdisciplinary study of
anthropological and humanistic conceptions of all forms of cultural
production in relation to social and historical structures. Topics may
include: a range of societys arts, beliefs, institutions, and communicative
practices in relation to social and historical structures. May be repeated
for credit when topics vary.
105
106
Department of
Counseling
The Department of Counseling offers the Master of Science in Mental
Health Counseling, Master of Education in School Counseling and the
Doctor of Philosophy in Counselor Education and Supervision.
107
COU 5203
COU 5213
Counseling Theories
COU 5223
COU 5233
COU 5243
Diagnosis in Counseling
COU 5283
COU 5393
COU 5613
COU 5683
Practicum in Counseling
COU 5713
COU 5723
COU 6153
COU 6523
COU 6883
EDP 5033
EDU 5003
Research Methods
Degree Requirements
Candidates for the Master of Science degree in Clinical Mental Health
Counseling must earn a minimum of 60 semester credit hours. Students
must pass a comprehensive portfolio requirement at the conclusion
of their formal coursework. The portfolio may be repeated. However,
students who fail the portfolio two times must seek petition for reevaluation and describe via a formal, letter utilizing current APA Style
Guidelines exactly how they will address previous portfolio failures and
9
60
108
Department of Counseling
COU 5223
COU 5233
COU 5243
Diagnosis in Counseling
COU 5253
COU 5283
COU 5393
COU 5213
Counseling Theories
COU 5683
COU 5793
COU 5803
Practicum in Counseling
COU 5813
COU 6003
COU 6153
EDP 5033
EDP 5003
48
109
Degree Requirements
Research
Scholarly writing
Clinical supervision with practicum students
Supervised co-teaching experiences
Advanced clinical competencies
Advanced multicultural competencies
COU 6323
COU 7121
COU 7133
COU 7213
COU 7283
COU 7313
Practicum in Counseling
COU 7383
COU 7413
Internship I
COU 7513
Internship II
COU 7583
Supervision of Counseling
COU 7593
COU 7893
B. Research courses:
COU 6893
COU 7103
EDU 7043
EDU 7063
Inferential Statistics
D. Dissertation:
COU 7993
Dissertation
110
Department of Counseling
COU 7996
Dissertation
6
67
Courses
COU 5103. Introduction to School Counseling. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Orients students to UTSAs Counseling Program, the school counseling
profession, and the roles of professional school counselors. Investigates
the legal and ethical aspects of school counseling. Examines planning,
designing, implementing, and evaluating a comprehensive and
developmental guidance and counseling program that includes
students, teachers, administrators, parents, and community members.
Examines state and national counseling program models and required
competencies.
COU 5113. Ethical, Legal, and Professional Issues in Counseling.
(3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Explores philosophical precepts on which counseling interventions are
based. Examines ethical and legal standards related to professional
practice and the impact of personal values on the counseling process.
COU 5203. Introduction to Clinical Mental Health Counseling. (3-0) 3
Credit Hours.
Provides an overview of the counseling profession. Explores ethical
and diversity issues of school and community counselors. Provides an
orientation to the counseling program, information about professional
credentials, and job roles. Requires observational experience.
111
112
Department of Counseling
113
114
Department of Counseling
Department of
Educational Leadership
and Policy Studies
The Department of Educational Leadership and Policy Studies offers the
Master of Education in in Educational Leadership and Policy studies,
the Doctor of Education in Educatonal Leadership and the Graduate
Certificate in Higher Education Administration.
Master of Education Degree in Educational Leadership and Policy
Studies (p. 115)
Doctor of Education Degree in Educational Leadership (p. 115)
115
Degree Requirements
A. Core Courses:
EDL 5303
EDU 5003
Research Methods
EDU 6223
27
EDL 5003
EDL 5203
EDL 5403
EDL 5503
EDL 5703
EDL 6013
EDL 6023
EDL 6943
HSA 5023
HSA 5103
HSA 5203
HSA 6003
HSA 6123
HSA 6143
HSA 6503
HSA 6943
36
116
Degree Requirements
The Ed.D in Educational Leadership is a 60-semester-credit-hour
program. Degree candidates must complete 3336 semester credit hours
of core courses:
Core Courses (33-36 semester credit hours):
A. 9 semester credit hours of Culture:
12
12-15
9-12
Dissertation
LDR 7992
Dissertation
LDR 7993
Dissertation
LDR 7994
Dissertation
LDR 7995
Dissertation
LDR 7996
Dissertation
60
Dissertation Requirement
Not later than the completion of the required 51 semester credit hours,
students must pass a written and oral qualifying examination. With
advisor approval, students may take the qualifying examination after
completing all coursework but the cognate support requirements. They
must also take a minimum of 9 semester credit hours of dissertation. The
dissertation must meet these objectives:
1. The dissertation format creates strong ties between the University
and the selected educational setting.
2. The dissertations research team consists of a doctoral student
and faculty member who work in collaboration with an educational
institution to focus on a single issue.
3. Dissertation topics are linked to the goal of improving program
effectiveness.
HSA 5103
HSA 5203
HSA 6003
HSA 6123
HSA 6303
HSA 6503
15
15
117
118
119
120
121
122
Department of
Educational Psychology
Mission Statement
The mission of the Department of Educational Psychology is to promote
the development and application of scientific knowledge. To do so, our
faculty members are committed to: Producing high-quality, innovative
research and scholarship; Providing effective and culturally inclusive
instructional technologies to prepare practitioners and researchers to use
the tools, resources, and strategies necessary to improve the educational
experience of all learners; Preparing culturally competent scientistpractitioners and researchers to effectively contribute to the applied
psychological development and well-being of children and adolescents;
Providing responsive educational and psychological services to the
local community, schools, and beyond; Engaging in participatory and
leadership roles in local, national, and international institutions and
organizations.
The Department of Educational Psychology faculty provide valuable
support to other departments and program areas within the College
of Education and Human Development and throughout the University
by teaching courses based on foundational educational psychology
concepts in areas such as learning, motivation, development,
assessment, and research methods. At this time, the Department of
Educational Psychology offers one graduate degree: the Master of Arts
degree in School Psychology. The Department also offers two graduate
certificates: Certificate in Applied Behavior Analysis and Certificate in
Language Acquisition and Bilingual Psychoeducational Assessment.
123
Degree Requirements
Candidates for the Master of Arts degree in School Psychology must
earn a minimum of 66 semester credit hours. Students must pass a
comprehensive written examination toward the end of their formal
coursework. The examination may be repeated, but students must be
registered for coursework at UTSA during the semester in which they
take the exam. Thus, students who have finished all of their required
coursework but have not passed the comprehensive examination must
register for EDP 6961 Comprehensive Examination during the semester
in which they take the exam.
The following 66 semester credit hours of coursework are required for all
students in the School Psychology program:
124
EDP 5003
EDP 5033
EDP 5053
EDP 5303
EDP 6033
EDP 6103
EDP 6203
EDP 6213
EDP 6233
EDP 6243
EDP 6253
EDP 6263
EDP 6293
EDP 6343
EDP 6643
EDP 6703
Clinical Neuropsychology
EDP 6733
EDP 6833
EDP 6943
SPE 5403
3
66
EDP 6263
SPE 5503
SPE 5793
& SPE 5893
15
Admission Requirements
A bachelors degree from an accredited university in an approved
area of study (e.g., psychology, education), or
A masters or doctoral degree from an accredited university in
an approved area of study (e.g., school psychology, counseling
psychology, educational diagnostician) or clinical psychology with
completion of graduate-level coursework in academic assessment
and cognitive assessment, or
Current Educational Diagnostic Certificate
Attainment of passing grade on a mandated Spanish proficiency test
(e.g., Texas Bilingual (Spanish) Target Language Proficiency Test or
designated University (ALPS) Spanish Proficiency Test)
Note: Appropriate coursework in areas of Cognitive Assessment
and Academic Assessment includes graduate-level coursework that
integrates the administration, scoring, and interpretation of commonly
125
Certificate Requirements
Requirements for completion include:
1. Completion of 15 graduate hours of approved UTSA coursework with
a grade point average (GPA) of 3.0 or above.
2. Completion of a language acquisition and bilingual psychoeducational
assessment project portfolio.
3. Maintain a 3.0 GPA throughout tenure in the program.
A. EDP Required Courses:
EDP 6343
EDP 6733
EDP 6833
ESL 5013
or BBL 7133
15
Courses
EDP 5003. Psychological Learning Theories. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Provides a current and comprehensive overview of theory and research
related to learning. Covers topics such as behaviorism, social cognitive
theory, information processing, constructivism and motivation. Explores
applications of learning principles in multiple contexts including classroom
and virtual learning environments. Appropriate for students in all areas of
graduate study.
EDP 5033. Human Development Across the Life Span. (3-0) 3 Credit
Hours.
Provides comprehensive overview of relevant research and theoretical
frameworks of human development across the life span. Topics include
cognitive, social, emotional, and sociocultural development as it exists in
various contexts including schools, communities and families. Appropriate
for students in all areas of graduate study.
126
127
128
Department of
Interdisciplinary
Learning and Teaching
Mission Statement
The mission of the Department of Interdisciplinary Learning and Teaching
is to:
Advance the intellectual and professional development of students
and faculty through research, critical reflection and dialogue, social
responsibility, and transformative leadership;
Promote equality and social justice by advocating for educational
change and reform; and
Nurture the personal and professional integrity of all learners.
The Department of Interdisciplinary Learning and Teaching offers the
following degrees: the Master of Arts in Education and the Doctor of
Philosophy in Interdisciplinary Learning and Teaching.
Master of Arts in Education (p. 129)
Curriculum and Instruction Concentration (p. 130)
Early Childhood and Elementary Education Concentration
(p. 130)
Instructional Technology Concentration (p. 131)
Literacy Education Concentration (p. 131)
Special Education Concentration (p. 131)
Teacher Certification Concentrations within the Master of Arts
Degree in Education (p. 131)
Doctor of Philosophy in Interdisciplinary Learning and Teaching
(p. 131)
129
Degree Requirements
Education degrees have three required components: a core of common
courses, a program emphasis, support work, and a comprehensive
examination.
A. Core courses common to all concentrations:
C&I 5003
EDU 5003
Research Methods
ILT 5003
12
33-36
ILT 5003
EDU 5003
Research Methods
130
12
Science Education
D. Thesis:
33
ILT 5003
EDU 5003
Research Methods
3
12
36
ECE 5503
ECE 6453
ECE 6653
ECE 6423
C&I 5013
C&I 6103
Research in Action
C&I 6673
or C&I 7123
C&I 5003
12
15
IST 5313
IST 5343
IST 5703
3
12
SPE 5503
SPE 5513
SPE 6403
SPE 6623
131
15
Certification Option
Students interested in seeking teacher certification in special education
should see an advisor for further instructions about the requirements for
this program.
132
ILT 7633
ILT 7733
C. Cognate Courses:
18
ILT 7983
60
6. Graduate Record Examination (GRE) test scores not older than five
years;
7. A professional curriculum vitae demonstrating experience in a
work environment where education was the primary professional
emphasis;
Degree Requirements
Program degree requirements include a minimum of 60 semester credit
hours in research methods, core courses, cognate courses, doctoral
research seminar, and dissertation courses. Students pursuing the Ph.D.
in Interdisciplinary Learning and Teaching will be required to pass a
qualifying examination prior to admission to candidacy. All candidates will
be required to submit a scholarly contribution in the form of a dissertation
as partial fulfillment of requirements for this degree. Students pursing
the Ph.D. in Interdisciplinary Learning and Teaching will be required to
complete an on-campus residence taking at least 6 semester credit hours
per semester or summer term for three consecutive semesters. For more
information, refer to Doctoral Degree Regulations in Chapter 5 of this
catalog.
A. Research Methods Courses:
ILR 7643
ILT 7013
B. Core Courses:
ILT 7003
ILT 7133
ILT 7143
Internship
ILT 7153
133
134
135
136
137
ECE 6523. Social Policy for Families and Children. (3-0) 3 Credit
Hours.
Examination of social policy and its implications for communities, families
and children. Students analyze national, state, and local policy for
educational settings and investigate local and regional resources for the
teaching and learning process.
ECE 6653. Action Research in Childhood Settings. (3-0) 3 Credit
Hours.
Prerequisite: EDU 5003. This is a capstone course restricted to students
in their last semester of the program. Advisor code required. Application
of research concepts and skills in field studies. Participants conduct
directed research in early childhood and elementary school settings.
(Formerly ECE 6643. Credit cannot be earned for both ECE 6653 and
ECE 6643. Credit cannot be earned for both ECE 6653 and C&I 6103.).
ECE 6723. Integrating Technology and Multimodal Digital Literacies
Across the Early Childhood Elementary Curriculum. (3-0) 3 Credit
Hours.
An investigation into the design and use of innovative technological tools
and instructional techniques across the early childhood and elementary
education curriculum. Opportunities for design and use of educational
experiences for children incorporating technological innovations. Includes
use of technology to customize instruction to meet the individual learning
needs of children.
ECE 6753. Metacognitive Thinking and Learning Strategies in
Childhood Settings. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
An exploration of metacognition in personal and school environments,
where an understanding of ones own thinking and learning strategies
assist in defining strengths and areas of growth in teaching. An emphasis
is made on the development of critical pedagogical thinking and teaching,
and its unification of elements into classroom practice that has meaningmaking applications for all life situations. (Formerly ECE 5523. Same as
C&I 5523. Credit cannot be earned for more than one of the following:
ECE 5523, ECE 6753, or C&I 5523.).
ECE 6943. Instructional Internship in Teaching. (0-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: Consent of students graduate advisor. Individually
supervised full-time field experience in assigned classrooms for one
semester (12 weeks) with related applied research activity. May be taken
for teaching internship or student teaching. May be repeated for credit,
but not more than 6 hours may be applied toward the M.A. in Education
degree.
138
IST 6623. New Literacies and Youth Cultures. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
New literacies involve new ways of being, doing, and participating
through practices such as multimodality, transmedia, and remixing.
Youth cultures are personal and social domains in which people express,
reinterpret, and share their interests, often through the use of digital
technologies. This course provides an overview of new literacies and
youth cultures, and their relationships, offering theoretical and practical
approaches to leverage them in educational settings.
IST 6943. Internship. (0-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisites: Consent of instructor and Graduate Advisor of Record.
Individually supervised field experience in a setting that provides direct
experience with the design, development, implementation, or evaluation
of technology-mediated learning experiences. (Credit cannot be earned
for both IST 6943 and other internships.).
IST 6951. Independent Study. (0-0) 1 Credit Hour.
Prerequisites: Graduate standing and permission in writing (form
available) of the instructor and the students Graduate Advisor of Record.
Independent reading, research, discussion, and/or writing under the
direction of a faculty member. For students needing specialized work not
normally or not often available as part of the regular course offerings.
May be repeated for credit, but not more than 6 hours, regardless of
discipline, will apply to the M.A. in Education degree.
IST 6953. Independent Study. (0-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisites: Graduate standing and permission in writing (form
available) of the instructor and the students Graduate Advisor of Record.
Independent reading, research, discussion, and/or writing under the
direction of a faculty member. For students needing specialized work not
normally or not often available as part of the regular course offerings.
May be repeated for credit, but not more than 6 hours, regardless of
discipline, will apply to the M.A. in Education degree.
IST 6973. Special Problems. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: Consent of instructor. An organized course that offers
graduate students the opportunity to engage in specialized study not
normally or not often available as part of the programs regular course
offerings. Special Problems courses may be repeated for credit when
topics vary, but not more than 6 hours, regardless of discipline, will apply
to the M.A. in Education degree.
IST 6983. Masters Thesis. (0-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisites: Permission of the Graduate Advisor of Record and thesis
director. Thesis research and preparation. May be repeated for credit,
but not more than 6 hours will apply to the Masters degree. Credit will be
awarded upon completion of the thesis. Enrollment is required each term
in which the thesis is in progress.
IST 7003. Proseminar in Instructional Technology. (3-0) 3 Credit
Hours.
This course is intended to provide an opportunity to explore the main
theories, practices, and areas of research in instructional technology.
Readings include seminal work in instructional technology, instructional
design, learning theories, and design-based research. Students will
become familiar with the tools and practices of successful doctoral work.
IST 7013. Field Research in Instructional Technology. (3-0) 3 Credit
Hours.
This course is designed to support students in doing field research in
instructional technology, including observations, interviews, and analysis.
Students will undertake their own research study and discuss relevant
literature.
139
140
141
142
143
Department of
Kinesiology, Health, and
Nutrition
Department of Kinesiology, Health, and Nutrition offers the Master of
Science degree in Health and Kinesiology and the Master of Dietetics
Studies.
Master of Science degree in Health and Kinesiology (p. 144)
Master of Dietetics Studies (p. 145)
Degree Requirements
Non-thesis option: Minimum 36 semester credit hours, including: 6 hours
of core courses, 12 required specialization hours, 9 prescribed KAH
elective hours, and 9 free elective hours.
Thesis option: Minimum 33 semester credit hours, including: 6 hours of
core courses, 12 required specialization hours, 9 prescribed KAH elective
hours, and 6 thesis hours.
A. Core Courses. 6 semester credit hours required:
KAH 5093
KAH 5123
Health Behaviors
KAH 5073
KAH 5083
Epidemiology
KAH 5133
KAH 5103
Biomechanics
KAH 5403
Cardiovascular Fitness
KAH 6203
144
KAH 5243
KAH 6033
Sport Psychology
KAH 6213
Motor Development
KAH 5053
KAH 5063
Health Behaviors
KAH 5073
KAH 5083
Epidemiology
KAH 5103
Biomechanics
KAH 5133
KAH 5173
KAH 5243
145
KAH 5303
Community Health
KAH 5403
Cardiovascular Fitness
KAH 6023
Exercise Psychology
KAH 6033
Sport Psychology
KAH 6043
KAH 6053
KAH 6063
KAH 6203
KAH 6213
Motor Development
KAH 6953
Independent Study
KAH 6961
Comprehensive Examination
KAH 6973
Special Problems
KAH 6983
Degree Requirements
Non-thesis option: Minimum of 30 semester credit hours including 28
hours of the core courses, and 2-3 hours of free electives.
A. Core Courses (28 semester credit hours):
NDT 5313
NDT 5323
Nutrition Pathophysiology
NDT 5333
NDT 5343
Integration of Metabolism
NDT 5947
NDT 5957
NDT 5901
Seminar in Dietetics
NDT 5911
Research Seminar
NDT 5851
Independent Study
KAH 5063
Health Behaviors
KAH 5073
KAH 6063
KAH 6223
Exercise Nutrition
2-3
30-31
146
147
148
College of Engineering
The College of Engineering offers the following graduate programs:
Master of Civil Engineering
Master of Science in Advanced Manufacturing and Enterprise
Engineering
Master of Science in Advanced Materials Engineering
Master of Science in Biomedical Engineering
Master of Science in Civil Engineering
Master of Science in Computer Engineering
Master of Science in Electrical Engineering
Master of Science in Mechanical Engineering
Doctor of Philosophy in Biomedical Engineering
Doctor of Philosophy in Electrical Engineering
Doctor of Philosophy in Environmental Science and Engineering
Doctor of Philosophy in Mechanical Engineering
These programs offer opportunities for advanced study and research
designed to prepare students for leadership roles in engineering careers
with industry, government, educational institutions, and research
organizations. For masters degree programs, a thesis option is
recommended for students who are planning a career in research or who
contemplate pursuing a doctorate in one of the engineering disciplines.
A nonthesis option is also available for students who desire a practical
industrial applications-oriented degree.
The Department of Biomedical Engineering offers a matrix of academic
tracks based on segments of biomedical engineering and/or areas
of clinical emphasis. Specifically, the program has emphases in the
following areas: biomaterials, biomechanics, and bioimaging. The
biological areas covered are orthopedics/dental tissues, cardiovascular
systems, and neural systems. The Department of Civil and Environmental
Engineering includes programs of study in structures, environmental
engineeringtransportation, water resources, hydrology, geotechnical
engineering, solid mechanics, and materials. The Department of
Electrical and Computer Engineering includes programs of study in
Computer Engineering, Systems and Control, Digital Signal Processing,
Communications, and Electronic Materials and Devices. The Department
of Mechanical Engineering includes programs of study in thermal and
fluid systems, mechanical systems and design, mechanics and materials,
and manufacturing engineering and systems.
All College of Engineering departments offer Masters programs
from their own discipline and research emphases: Department of
Biomedical Engineering offers M.S. in Biomedical Engineering,
Department of Civil Engineering offers M.S. in Civil Engineering and
Master of Civil Engineering, Department of Electrical and Computer
Engineering offers M.S. in Electrical Engineering and M.S. in Computer
Engineering, and Department of Mechanical Engineering offers M.S.
in Mechanical Engineering and M.S. in Advanced Manufacturing and
Enterprise Engineering. In addition, the College of Engineering offers
an interdisciplinary Master of Science degree in Advanced Materials
Engineering that features state-of-the-art technical knowledge and
multidisciplinary courses with focus in two concentration areas:
1. Multifunctional Electronic, Dielectric, Photonic and Magnetic
Materials; and
2. Multifunctional Biomedical Materials.
149
Courses
EGR 5023. Numerical Techniques in Engineering Analysis. (3-0) 3
Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing in engineering or consent of instructor.
Advanced methods of applied mathematics, including numerical linear
algebra, initial value problems, stability, convergence, partial differential
equations, and optimization.
EGR 5213. Topics in Systems Modeling. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing in engineering. Systems analysis
approach to formulating and solving engineering problems. Topics
include operational research, mathematical modeling, optimization,
linear and dynamic programming, decision analysis, and statistical
quality control. Topic 1: Applied Operations Research. Application of
operations research methods to practical engineering problems. Topic 2:
Engineering Systems Modeling. Modeling of modern engineering systems
for operational and management control. May be repeated for credit as
topics vary.
EGR 5233. Advanced Quality Control. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing in engineering or consent of instructor.
Methods and techniques for process control, process and gage
capabilities, inspection plans, American National Standard, and recent
advanced techniques. Tour of manufacturing industry. Case studies in
process control, outgoing quality, and costs. A project, assigned by a
manufacturing company, is required, along with a final presentation of the
project.
EGR 5703. Advanced Scientific Visualization. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing in engineering or consent of instructor.
Topics include 3D image display and generation techniques, visual
thinking process, interaction with visualization, efficiency of visualization
on sparse grid, haptic rendering and control, and immersive 3D
programming.
150
College of Engineering
Department of
Biomedical Engineering
The Department of Biomedical Engineering offers the Master of Science
degree in Biomedical Engineering and the Doctor of Philosophy degree in
Biomedical Engineering.
Master of Science in Biomedical Engineering (p. 151)
Doctor of Philosophy in Biomedical Engineering (p. 153)
Admission Requirements
Students who hold an undergraduate degree may apply to the program.
The minimum requirements for admission to the Master of Science
degree in Biomedical Engineering program are described below. Note
that admission is competitive and satisfying these requirements does not
guarantee admission.
Applicants must have a grade point average of 3.0 or better in
the last 60 semester credit hours of coursework with a major in a
recognized science or engineering discipline. All students should
have had sufficient background in engineering, chemistry, biology,
and physics prior to being admitted to the program. It is expected
that these students will have B.S. degrees with an emphasis in either
engineering, physical science, or biological science disciplines.
All students are required to have completed at least one year of
engineering physics, chemistry, biology, and mathematics (up to
Differential Equations I or Applied Engineering Analysis I). Students
with deficiencies in the above courses will be required to satisfactorily
complete selected courses as a condition of acceptance.
A satisfactory score, as evaluated by the Admissions Committee
for Biomedical Engineering, is required on the Graduate Record
Examination (GRE). Students whose native language is not English
must achieve a minimum score of 550 on the Test of English as
a Foreign Language (TOEFL) paper version or 79 on the Internet
version. The applicants performance on a standardized test will be
considered in addition to other criteria for admission or competitive
151
scholarship awards and will not be used as the sole criterion for
consideration of an applicant.
Three letters of recommendation attesting to the applicants
readiness for graduate study.
A complete application includes the application form, official
transcripts, letters of recommendation, GRE scores, a rsum, and
a statement of the applicants research experience, interests, and
goals. TOEFL scores are required for those applicants whose native
language is not English.
16.5
Biomedical Imaging
BME 6803
Experimental Biomechanics
BME 6903
Biomaterials
ORTO 6004
B. Research seminar
Neurophysiology
BIO 5483
Computational Neuroscience
BIO 5503
Sensory Physiology
BME 6093
BME 6203
BME 6213
Cellular Engineering
BME 6223
BME 6233
Cardiovascular Bioengineering
152
BME 6243
Mechanobiology
MOT 5313
BME 6253
Bioheat Transfer
MOT 5323
Biotechnology Industry
BME 6303
STA 5103
Applied Statistics
BME 6313
CSBL 5022
BME 6323
Bioinformatics
CSBL 5095
BME 6333
INTD 5005
BME 6343
INTD 5006
BME 6353
INTD 5007
BME 6363
INTD 5041
Neuroscience Medical
INTD 5067
BME 6523
BME 6723
Bioinstrumentations
BME 6733
BME 6743
Biophotonics
BME 6753
BME 6793
BME 6823
Advanced Biomechanics
BME 6863
BME 6873
Biofluid Mechanics
BME 6893
Topics in Biomechanics
BME 6913
Biomaterials II
BME 6923
Tissue Engineering
BME 6933
Tissue-Biomaterials Interactions
BME 6943
BME 6953
BME 6963
BME 6973
BME 6993
Topics in Biomaterials
CHE 5263
EE 5243
EE 5263
EE 5353
EE 6343
EE 6363
ME 5013
ME 5243
Advanced Thermodynamics
ME 5413
Elasticity
ME 5463
Fracture Mechanics
ME 5473
Viscoelasticity
ME 5483
ME 5613
ME 5653
ME 5713
ME 5743
Composite Materials
MOT 5163
Management of Technology
MOT 5243
MOT 5253
Emerging Technologies
INTD 6033
MICR 5051
Introduction to Immunology
PHAR 5013
Principles of Pharmacology
PHYL 5013
Dental Physiology
PHYL 5045
Mammalian Physiology
PHYL 6091
RADI 6014
RADI 6016
RADI 6017
Neuroimaging Methods
RADI 6019
RESD 6102
Biomaterials II
6
31.5
Advancement to Candidacy
The student should seek recommendations from the COGS for
advancement to candidacy. The COGS reserves the right to deny
recommendation of the students admission to Masters candidacy
based on the students academics and proposed research. Upon
recommendation from the COGS, all students are admitted to candidacy
after successfully defending their proposed research, recommended by
his/her Masters Thesis Committee, and approved by the Dean of the
Graduate School. Students should also consult the University Masters
Degree Regulations in Chapter 4 of this catalog for the other pertinent
requirements.
Thesis Defense
A thesis, which is an original contribution to scholarship, based on
independent investigation (graduate research) in the major area, is
required of every candidate. The Masters thesis research will be
conducted by the student under the guidance of the Supervising
Professor and the advice of the Masters Thesis Committee. Prior to
starting the thesis research, each student will submit a research proposal
to the COGS for approval. The thesis will be the responsibility of the
student and the Supervising Professor. Registration for thesis credit
hours must be for a period of more than one semester. During each
semester that a student receives advice and/or assistance from a faculty
member or supervision by the Masters Thesis Committee or uses UTSA
Biomedical Imaging
BME 6803
Experimental Biomechanics
BME 6903
Biomaterials
BME 6961
Comprehensive Examination
ORTO 6004
B. Research seminar
A.Core Courses:
BME 6033
153
17.5
35.5
Admission Requirements
Students who hold an undergraduate or masters degree may apply
to the program. The minimum requirements for admission to the
Doctor of Philosophy in Biomedical Engineering degree program are
described below. Note that admission is competitive and satisfying these
requirements does not guarantee admission.
Applicants must have a grade point average of 3.0 or better in the last
60 semester credit hours of coursework with a major in a recognized
science or engineering discipline. All students should have had
sufficient background in engineering, chemistry, biology, and physics
prior to being admitted to the program. It is expected that these
students will have B.S. degrees with emphasis in either engineering,
physical science, or biological science disciplines. All students are
required to have completed at least one year of engineering physics,
154
CSBL 5095
INTD 5082
ORTO 6003
ORTO 6004
RADI 5015
B. Research seminar
Neurophysiology
BIO 5483
Computational Neuroscience
BIO 5503
Sensory Physiology
BME 6043
BME 6093
BME 6203
BME 6233
Cardiovascular Bioengineering
BME 6243
Mechanobiology
25.5
BME 6213
Cellular Engineering
BME 6223
BME 6253
Bioheat Transfer
BME 6303
BME 6313
BME 6323
Bioinformatics
BME 6333
BME 6343
BME 6353
BME 6363
BME 6523
BME 6723
Bioinstrumentations
BME 6733
BME 6743
Biophotonics
BME 6753
BME 6793
BME 6823
Advanced Biomechanics
BME 6863
Experimental Biomechanics
BME 6873
Biofluid Mechanics
Biomaterials
BME 6893
Topics in Biomechanics
BME 6913
Biomaterials II
BME 6923
Tissue Engineering
OR
BME 6933
Tissue-Biomaterials Interactions
PHYL 5013
BME 6943
Dental Physiology
BME 6953
BME 6963
BME 6973
BME 6993
Topics in Biomaterials
155
15
CHE 5263
EE 5243
EE 5263
EE 5353
EE 6343
EE 6363
ME 5013
ME 5243
Advanced Thermodynamics
ME 5413
Elasticity
ME 5463
Fracture Mechanics
ME 5473
Viscoelasticity
ME 5483
ME 5613
ME 5653
ME 5713
ME 5743
Composite Materials
STA 5103
Applied Statistics
Advancement to Candidacy
All students seeking a doctoral degree must be admitted to candidacy
after passing a doctoral qualifying examination. Students should consult
the University Doctoral Degree Regulations in Chapter 5 of this catalog
for the other pertinent requirements.
INTD 5006
INTD 5007
INTD 5041
Neuroscience Medical
INTD 5067
INTD 6033
MICR 5051
Introduction to Immunology
PHAR 5013
Principles of Pharmacology
PHYL 5045
Mammalian Physiology
PHYL 6091
RADI 6014
RADI 6016
RADI 6017
Neuroimaging Methods
RADI 6019
RESD 6102
Biomaterials II
Management of Technology
81
Doctoral Dissertation
MOT 5243
MOT 5253
MOT 5313
Emerging Technologies
MOT 5323
Biotechnology Industry
156
Courses
BME 6011. Research Seminar. (1-0) 1 Credit Hour.
Prerequisites: Graduate student standing; consent of the instructor and
the Graduate Advisor of Record. The seminar coordinator may require
students to present their research. May be repeated for credit. The
grade report for the course is either CR (satisfactory performance) or
NC (unsatisfactory performance). (Formerly BME 5011 and BME 6991.
Same as ORTO 6090 at UTHSCSA.).
BME 6021. Supervised Teaching. (0-0) 1 Credit Hour.
Prerequisites: Doctoral student standing; consent of the instructor and
the Graduate Advisor of Record. Supervised teaching of undergraduate
or graduate students will be required for at least one semester. Students
may be required to lecture at undergraduate courses or graduate courses
in the field of their expertise. Students will work with the instructor of the
course or with their research supervisor on the number of classes to be
taught. (Same as ORTO 6071 at UTHSCSA.).
157
158
159
160
Department of Civil
and Environmental
Engineering
The Department of Civil Engineering offers the Master of Civil
Engineering degree and the Master of Science degree in Civil
Engineering, as well as the Doctor of Philosophy degree in Environmental
Science and Engineering.
Master of Science Degree in Civil Engineering (p. 161)
Master of Civil Engineering Degree (p. 161)
Doctor of Philosophy Degree in Environmental Science and
Engineering (p. 162)
Admission Requirements
For unconditional admission, applicants must satisfy the following
requirements, in addition to the University-wide graduate admission
requirements (refer to Chapter 1, Admission):
an undergraduate degree in Civil Engineering or a closely related
field from an accredited institution of higher education, or proof of
equivalent training at a foreign institution;
a satisfactory score, as evaluated by the Civil Engineering Graduate
Studies Committee, on the Graduate Record Examination (GRE);
Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) minimum scores of
79 or 550 for Internet or paper versions, respectively;
a statement of research/specialization interest; and
a favorable recommendation by the Civil Engineering Graduate
Studies Committee.
Degree Requirements
The minimum number of semester credit hours required for the degree
is 30. At least 24 semester credit hours must be taken at UTSA. Elective
courses may be chosen from the Department of Civil and Environmental
Engineering (CEE) or outside the department, with approval from the
CEE Graduate Studies Committee. In addition, 6 hours of undergraduate
courses may be taken toward the course requirements, if not previously
taken and counted toward the students undergraduate degree with the
approval of the CEE Graduate Studies Committee. Any grade lower than
B in a graduate course or in remedial coursework at the undergraduate
level cannot be counted toward the coursework requirement. Each
161
Advisory Committee
Students must choose an Advisory Committee consisting of a chair and
at least two additional graduate faculty members. Students must submit
the names of their Advisory Committee to the CEE Graduate Studies
Committee by the end of their first semester of study.
Program of Study
A. Degree Core Curriculum
CE 5043
CE 5143
B. Electives
3
3
18
6
30
Admission Requirements
For unconditional admission, applicants must satisfy the following
requirements, in addition to the University-wide graduate admission
requirements (refer to Chapter 1, Admission):
an undergraduate degree in Civil Engineering or a closely related
field from an accredited institution of higher education, or proof of
equivalent training at a foreign institution;
a satisfactory score, as evaluated by the Civil Engineering Graduate
Studies Committee, on the Graduate Record Examination (GRE);
Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) minimum scores of
79 or 550 for Internet or paper versions, respectively;
a statement of specialization interest; and
a favorable recommendation by the Civil Engineering Graduate
Studies Committee.
Degree Requirements
The minimum number of semester credit hours required for the degree
is 34. At least 24 semester credit hours must be taken at UTSA. Elective
courses may be chosen from the Department of Civil and Environmental
Engineering (CEE) or outside the department, with approval from the
CEE Graduate Studies Committee. In addition, 6 hours of undergraduate
courses may be taken toward the course requirements, if not previously
taken and counted toward the students undergraduate degree with the
approval of the CEE Graduate Studies Committee. Any grade lower than
B in a graduate course or in remedial coursework at the undergraduate
level cannot be counted toward the coursework requirement.
Each student has to take a comprehensive examination during his or
her seminar presentation at the end of his or her program. He/she is
162
time students accepted for the program are eligible to apply for financial
support in the form of competitive teaching assistantships, research
assistantships, or research fellowships.
Program of Study
Degree Requirements
CE 5143
B. Electives
27
1
34
Admission Requirements
Applicants must satisfy the following requirements, in addition to
satisfying the University-wide graduate admission requirements (refer to
Chapter 1, Admission):
a Bachelor of Science degree and a Master of Science degree from
an accredited university, and a minimum grade point average of
3.0 in upper-division and graduate courses. The degrees should
be in biology, ecology, environmental science, chemistry, geology,
geography, environmental engineering, civil engineering or other
related scientific or engineering discipline. Exceptional applicants
without a Master of Science degree may be considered for admission
to the program on a case-by-case basis;
three letters of recommendation from persons familiar with the
applicants academic potential;
official Graduate Record Examination (GRE) scores;
a letter of research/specialization interest; and
a rsum/curriculum vita.
Applications must be submitted to the UTSA Graduate School online
at http://graduateschool.utsa.edu/. Incomplete applications will not be
considered. Acceptance to the program is decided by the Doctoral
Studies Committee (DSC), comprised of graduate faculty members
selected from the CEE Department and the College of Sciences. Full-
Dissertation Committee
Students must choose a Dissertation Committee consisting of a chair and
at least four additional graduate faculty members. This committee must
include a minimum of one faculty member from the CEE Department and
one from the College of Sciences. Students must submit the names of
their Dissertation Committee to the DSC Chair by the end of their second
semester of study.
Program of Study
A. Degree Core Curriculum:
CE 5001
CE 5043
or ES 5023
Environmental Statistics
CE 5013
or ES 5233
Global Change
ES 5043
Global Change
GEO 5043
Global Change
3
3
B. Track Electives:
These can be selected from 50007000 level courses offered in
Civil and Environmental Engineering or other departments, with the
approval of the Environmental Science and Engineering Doctoral
Studies Committee.
1. Environmental Science Track Electives
12
or ES 5981
Doctoral Research
or CE 7212
Doctoral Research
or CE 7211
Doctoral Research
CE 7313
Doctoral Dissertation
or CE 7312
Doctoral Dissertation
or CE 7311
Doctoral Dissertation
Option II:
ES 7213
Doctoral Research
or ES 7212
Doctoral Research
or ES 7211
Doctoral Research
Doctoral Dissertation
60
CE 6221
Doctoral Dissertation
or ES 7311
Advancement to Candidacy
D. Seminars:
Doctoral Dissertation
or ES 7312
C. Other Electives:
ES 7313
163
30
Dissertation
Candidates must demonstrate their ability to conduct independent
research by completing an original dissertation. The Dissertation
Committee guides, critiques and finally approves the candidates
dissertation. The format of the dissertation must follow the doctoral
degree regulations of the Graduate School as documented under
Chapter 5 of this catalog.
164
Courses
CE 5001. Process and Ethics in Thesis/Dissertation Research
Development. (1-0) 1 Credit Hour.
Course discusses the process and the ethical issues involved in
conducting research and developing a thesis or dissertation. It covers
research organizational skills, literature searches, technical writing,
honesty in writing and plagiarism issues.
CE 5013. Civil Engineering Systems Analysis. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Systems approach to optimization and problem solving; operations
research applications in civil engineering; mathematical modeling and
analysis techniques including linear programming, dynamic programming,
decision analysis and use of software to solve linear and nonlinear
programming problems.
CE 5023. Finite Element Methods. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Derivation and computer implementation of the finite element method for
the solution of civil engineering boundary value problems. (Same as ME
5483. Credit cannot be earned for both CE 5023 and ME 5483.).
CE 5043. Advanced Civil Engineering Statistics. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Statistical analysis methods include descriptive statistics, interval
estimation and hypothesis testing, analysis of variance, design of
experiments, regression analysis, and time series analysis. Additional
topics covered include probabilistic methods, decision analysis and
reliability analysis applied to civil engineering systems.
CE 5103. Advanced Steel Design. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Connection design, welded and bolted, moment-resistant connections,
plate girders, column stability, bracing design, and seismic design of
frames. (Formerly CE 5343 Topic 4: Advanced Steel Design. Credit
cannot be earned for both CE 5103 and CE 5343 Advanced Steel
Design.).
CE 5123. Bridge Engineering. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Design loads, load distribution, design of superstructures and
substructures, and evaluation and load rating capacity of bridges.
(Formerly CE 5343 Topic 8: Bridge Engineering. Credit cannot be earned
for both CE 5123 and CE 5343 Bridge Engineering.).
CE 5133. Advanced Reinforced Concrete. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Curved beams, torsion design, retaining walls and shear walls, stairs,
two-way slabs, yield-line theory, biaxial load on columns, slenderness
effects, joint design, strut-and-tie methods, and concrete elasticity
and failure criteria. (Formerly CE 5343 Topic 2: Advanced Reinforced
Concrete Structures. Credit cannot be earned for both CE 5133 and CE
5343 Advanced Reinforced Concrete Structures.).
CE 5143. Numerical Methods in Civil Engineering. (3-0) 3 Credit
Hours.
Mathematical equation root finding and optimization methods, matrix
equations, solution methods, eigenvector and eigenvalue solution
methods, finite difference methods, curve-fitting methods, numerical
integration and differentiation techniques, and introduction to finite
element formulations.
165
166
167
Department of Electrical
and Computer
Engineering
168
Thesis Option
Thesis Option
Degree Requirements
The minimum number of semester credit hours required for the degree is
30 for the thesis option and 33 for the nonthesis option.
Computer Architecture
Communications Concentration
EE 5183
Masters Thesis
30
Nonthesis Option
The degree requires 33 semester credit hours of technical course credits.
At least 9 semester credit hours, including 3 semester credit hours of
a core course, must be taken from one area to establish the student's
concentration. At least 6 semester credit hours of core courses must be
taken outside the concentration area to satisfy the breadth requirement.
No more than 3 semester credit hours of independent study should be
included. One (1) semester credit hour of EE 6991 Research Seminar
is required and up to two (2) semester credit hours of EE 6991 may
be included. Up to 6 semester credit hours may be taken from other
graduate courses including courses from outside electrical engineering
with approval of the Electrical Engineering Graduate Program Committee.
169
EE 5153
EE 5163
EE 5203
EE 5263
EE 5353
EE 5123
EE 6363
Nonthesis Option
A. Core course based on student's area of concentration from the list
below:
Computer Architecture
Communications
EE 5153
EE 5163
EE 5183
EE 5283
Communications Concentration
EE 5373
Wireless Communication
EE 5473
EE 5693
EE 5583
EE 6383
EE 5183
Graduate Project
33
EE 5293
Topics in Microelectronics
EE 5403
EE 5413
Principles of Microfabrication
EE 5503
EE 5593
EE 5693
EE 6493
Concentrations
The Electrical Engineering (EE) courses are divided into five
concentrations as follows:
Comprehensive Examination
Computer Engineering
EE 5103
Engineering Programming
EE 5113
EE 5123
Computer Architecture
EE 5193
EE 5223
EE 5323
EE 5423
EE 5453
EE 5243
EE 5343
EE 5443
EE 6343
EE 7443
170
EE 6991
Research Seminar
CPE 6951
Independent Study
CPE 6952
Independent Study
CPE 6953
Independent Study
Degree Requirements
The minimum number of semester credit hours required for the degree is
30 for the thesis option and 33 for the nonthesis option.
The courses are divided into three groups as follows:
CS 5113
Computer Graphics
CS 5233
Artificial Intelligence
CS 5253
Expert Systems
CS 5363
CS 5523
Operating Systems
Master's Thesis
30
Nonthesis Option
A. Select any two core courses from Group A
Group A. The following four core courses of this group form the
basis for the program:
EE 5103
Engineering Programming
EE 5113
EE 5123
Computer Architecture
EE 5193
Thesis Option
A. Select any two core courses from Group A
Group A. The following four core courses of this group form the
basis for the program:
EE 5103
Engineering Programming
EE 5113
EE 5123
Computer Architecture
EE 5193
CS 5103
Software Engineering
EE 5163
EE 5223
EE 5293
EE 5323
EE 5353
EE 5423
CS 5103
Software Engineering
EE 5163
EE 5453
EE 5223
EE 6991
Research Seminar
EE 5293
CPE 6951
Independent Study
CPE 6952
Independent Study
EE 5323
CPE 6953
Independent Study
EE 5353
EE 5423
EE 5453
Computer Graphics
CS 5233
Artificial Intelligence
CS 5253
Expert Systems
171
CS 5363
CS 5523
Operating Systems
Graduate Project
33
One (1) credit hour of EE 6991 Research Seminar is required for both
the thesis and nonthesis options and up to two (2) credit hours of EE
6991 can be included. No more than three (3) credit hours of independent
study can be included.
Degree plans must be consistent with the guidelines established by
the Computer Engineering Graduate Program Committee. In general,
undergraduate courses, general education courses, and courses
satisfying provisional conditions for admission cannot be counted toward
the total required degree credit hours.
Comprehensive Examination
Degree candidates are required to pass an oral comprehensive
examination. The examination is to be administered in the form of a
presentation of the thesis or research project to the students advisory
committee, chaired by a tenured or tenure-track graduate faculty
member. Students must register for one semester credit hour of
Comprehensive Examination for the semester in which the examination is
to be taken, if they are not enrolled in other courses.
The M.S. in MatE offers core courses to all enrolled students to achieve
a common platform of understanding and knowledge. Subsequently,
students will choose their concentrations according to materials
classifications and applications. Currently two concentrations are offered:
Concentration I Multifunctional Electronic, Dielectric, Photonic and
Magnetic Materials
Concentration II Multifunctional Biomedical Materials
With the approval of the Program Director and the students Supervising
Professor, a student may take graduate-level courses offered by other
graduate programs related to materials science and engineering,
including from the Management of Technology program, to augment the
students education and creativity in interdisciplinary areas and to better
prepare for jobs in research and in the industry.
Both thesis and nonthesis options are available.
Degree Requirements
The minimum number of semester credit hours required for the M.S. in
MatE degree is 30 for the thesis option and 33 for the nonthesis option.
Thesis Option
The degree requires 30 semester credit hours including 24 technical
course credits and 6 thesis credits identified as MATE 6983 Masters
Thesis Research. A total of 18 semester credit hours, including 9 credits
of core courses in Group A and at least 6 credits of concentration courses
and 3 credits of another concentration course in Group B must be taken
to satisfy the depth and the breadth requirement. Up to 6 credits, but
no more than a total of 3 semester credit hours of MATE 6951 Directed
Research in Advanced Materials Engineering, MATE 6952 Directed
Research in Advanced Materials Engineering, MATE 6953 Directed
Research in Advanced Materials Engineering and Research Seminar
courses (BME 6011 or EE 6991), may be taken from other graduate
courses in Group C, including courses from outside the College of
Engineering with the approval of the Advanced Materials Engineering
Graduate Program Committee. A current list of MATE graduate courses
is available in the department office.
Thesis Option
A. Required Core Courses from Group A
ME 5483
ME 5713
ME 5743
Composite Materials
MATE 5103
MOT 5243
MOT 5253
MATE 5113
MOT 5313
Emerging Technologies
MOT 5163
Management of Technology
MOT 5323
Biotechnology Industry
MOT 5333
EE 5413
Principles of Microfabrication
EE 5503
EE 5693
EE 6493
MATE 5213
MATE 5223
Structure-Chemistry-Property Relations in
Materials Science and Engineering
MATE 5233
MATE 5243
MATE 5253
MATE 5393
BME 6943
BME 6953
BME 6963
BME 6993
Topics in Biomaterials
MATE 5513
MATE 5523
MATE 5533
Biomaterials
MATE 5543
MATE 5393
Research Seminar
EE 6991
Research Seminar
MATE 6951
MATE 6952
MATE 6953
BME 6723
Bioinstrumentations
Special Problems
MOT 6973
Special Problems
30
Nonthesis Option
The degree requires 33 semester credit hours including 30 technical
course credits and 3 project credits identified as MATE 6943 Masters
Project. A total of 24 semester credit hours, including 9 credits of core
courses in Group A and at least 9 credits of concentration courses and
3 credits of another concentration course in Group B, must be taken
to satisfy the depth and the breadth requirement. Up to 9 credits, but
no more than a total of 3 credits of MATE 6951 Directed Research in
Advanced Materials Engineering, MATE 6952 Directed Research in
Advanced Materials Engineering, MATE 6953 Directed Research in
Advanced Materials Engineering and Research Seminar courses (BME
6011 or EE 6991), may be taken from other graduate courses in Group
C, including courses from outside the College of Engineering with the
approval of the Advanced Materials Engineering Graduate Program
Committee. A current list of MATE graduate courses is available in the
department office.
MOT 6971
172
Nonthesis Option
A. Required Core Courses from Group A
MATE 5113
MOT 5163
Management of Technology
EE 5413
Principles of Microfabrication
EE 5503
EE 5693
EE 6493
MATE 5213
MATE 5223
Structure-Chemistry-Property Relations in
Materials Science and Engineering
MATE 5233
MATE 5243
12
173
MATE 5253
MATE 5393
Comprehensive Examination
Degree candidates are required to pass an oral comprehensive
examination. The examination is to be administered in the form of a
presentation of the thesis or research project to the students Supervising
Committee. The Supervising Committee consists of minimum two (for
non-thesis option) or three (for thesis option) graduate faculty members;
two of the members including the Chair of the Committee must be
graduate faculty members affiliated with the M.S. in MatE program.
Students must register for 1 semester credit hour of Comprehensive
Examination for the semester in which the examination is to be taken, if
they are not enrolled in other courses.
Tissue-Biomaterials Interactions
BME 6943
BME 6953
BME 6963
BME 6993
Topics in Biomaterials
MATE 5513
MATE 5523
MATE 5533
Biomaterials
MATE 5543
MATE 5393
BME 6011
Research Seminar
EE 6991
Research Seminar
MATE 6951
The regulations for this degree comply with the general University
regulations (refer to Chapter 2, General Academic Regulations, and
Chapter 5, Doctoral Degree Regulations).
MATE 6952
Admission Requirements
MATE 6953
BME 6723
Bioinstrumentations
ME 5483
ME 5713
ME 5743
Composite Materials
MOT 5243
MOT 5253
MOT 5313
Emerging Technologies
MOT 5323
Biotechnology Industry
MOT 5333
MOT 6971
Special Problems
MOT 6973
Special Problems
Masters Project
33
EE 5143
EE 5163
EE 5183
EE 5693
174
Advancement to Candidacy
All students seeking a doctoral degree at UTSA must be admitted
to candidacy. One of the requirements for admission to candidacy is
passing a doctoral qualifying examination. Students should consult the
Universitys Doctoral Degree Regulations (Chapter 5 in this catalog) for
other requirements.
Qualifying Examination
The Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering qualifying examination contains two
components: (I) Knowledge Competencies through fulfillment of graduate
coursework in both primary and secondary concentration areas and
(II) Communication and Research Competencies through submission
of a written research proposal followed by an oral presentation to
the Candidacy Examination Committee. Successful completion of a
candidacy examination is required for formal admission into the Electrical
Engineering Doctoral program.
I. Knowledge Competencies
In order to establish knowledge competencies, the student must have a
Preliminary Program of Study on file and must submit his or her request
in writing to the Graduate Advisor of Record after completion of required
coursework. The student must take and pass the concentration-specific
written Qualifying Examination to demonstrate readiness to pursue a
Ph.D. in the chosen field. The written exam is offered each winter and
summer prior to the start of the Spring and Fall semesters. Other courses
taken at UTSA that satisfy knowledge competencies are three courses
including one core course of the students primary area and two core
courses representing the students secondary areas, with a grade point
average (GPA) of no less than 3.3. No courses with a GPA of less than
3.0 can be counted to satisfy the knowledge competency. An advanced
graduate course (non-laboratory intensive) with a specified core course
as prerequisite may be used, upon the approval of the Graduate Advisor
of Record, to satisfy the given core course requirement, if the student
took the core (or equivalent) course for credit in a different degree
program or at another institution.
175
B.S. students can start working with the faculty advisors on research
projects as early as in their senior year.
Full-time students who fail their first attempt at the candidacy exams may
make a second attempt within one semester or prior to the end of the
fourth long semester since the students admission to the Ph.D. program,
whichever is earlier. No more than two attempts to pass the candidacy
exams are permitted.
When both the Knowledge Competency and the Communication and
Research Competency requirements are successfully satisfied, the Chair
of the Graduate Program Committee will notify the student of his or her
formal admission as a candidate to the Electrical Engineering Doctoral
program. If a student passes the candidacy exam provisionally with
coursework recommendations, including English as a Second Language
(ESL) courses, the student will not be advanced to the Dissertation
Proposal Examination until all provisional conditions are met.
Degree Requirements
B.S. Degree Requirement
The current undergraduate degree programs in Electrical Engineering
and Computer Engineering require 126 semester credit hours for
completion with fifteen of these hours (five 3-hour courses) as technical
electives. Students accepted into the Integrated B.S./M.S. program will
be required to complete 117 undergraduate semester credit hours and 9
graduate semester credit hours to replace three of the five undergraduate
technical elective courses toward the B.S. degree, provided that students
pass the corresponding challenge exams for the three undergraduate
elective courses. The graduate courses include one of the required core
graduate courses and other two technical electives from the same area
of concentration. Students may enroll in a cross-listed course and take
a challenge exam following the UTSAs challenge exam procedure to
earn undergraduate credits for the graduate course taken (see Footnote
1). Credits earned by challenging UTSA undergraduate courses by
examination apply to Bachelor degree requirements. Grades of CR are
not included in the UTSA grade point average calculation.
A graduate core course taken as an undergraduate must be completed
with a grade of B or better. If a grade lower than B is received, it
can be counted as an undergraduate technical elective, but in order to
stay in the Integrated B.S./M.S. program, a student must pass one of
the graduate core courses with a grade of B or better. Undergraduate
students not able to satisfy this requirement, or simply wishing to
voluntarily withdraw from the Integrated B.S./M.S. program, must use
a combination of five undergraduate technical electives and graduate
courses to satisfy the original 126-hour regular degree program
requirement in order to receive their B.S. degree. Students continuing
on in the Integrated B.S./M.S. program will apply 117 undergraduate
semester credit hours and 9 semester credit hours of technical elective
courses by passing the challenging exams to their B.S. degrees. The
9 graduate semester credit hours taken as an undergraduate will be
counted towards the M.S. degree requirement.
B.S./M.S. Classification
Once admitted to the B.S./M.S. combined program, students are
allowed to take graduate courses as undergraduate students. Students
admitted to the Integrated B.S./M.S. program will be reclassified from
undergraduate to graduate student status when they have completed 126
semester credit hours of coursework (of any combination of graduate and
undergraduate hours) toward their degrees.
1
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
Department of
Mechanical Engineering
Degree Requirements
The minimum number of semester credit hours required for the degree is
30 for the thesis option and 33 for the nonthesis option.
Thesis Option
EGR 5023
MAT 5603
Numerical Analysis
MS 5003
STA 5093
STA 5103
Applied Statistics
EGR 6013
EGR 6023
ME 5563
ME 5583
ME 5593
ME 5603
ME 5703
EGR 5213
184
12
6
Masters Thesis
30
Nonthesis Option
A. 3 semester credit hours of a Required Mathematics Course
selected from one of the following:
EGR 5023
EGR 5213
MAT 5603
Numerical Analysis
MS 5003
STA 5093
STA 5103
Applied Statistics
EGR 6013
EGR 6023
ME 5563
ME 5583
ME 5593
ME 5603
ME 5703
18
185
Special Project
33
Prescribed Electives
CE 5613
Environmental Chemistry
CE 5623
CE 5703
CE 5733
CS 5233
Artificial Intelligence
CS 5253
Expert Systems
CS 5623
Simulation Techniques
EE 5143
EE 5243
EE 5343
EE 5413
Principles of Microfabrication
EGR 5023
EGR 5213
EGR 5233
EGR 6013
EGR 6023
ES 5023
Environmental Statistics
IS 5143
Information Technology
IS 6433
ME 5113
ME 5143
Advanced Dynamics
ME 5503
ME 5513
ME 5533
ME 5553
ME 5563
ME 5573
ME 5583
ME 5593
ME 5603
ME 5703
ME 5713
ME 6563
ME 6573
ME 6953
Independent Study
MOT 5163
Management of Technology
MOT 5233
MOT 5313
Emerging Technologies
MS 5003
MS 5023
MS 5343
MS 5393
MS 5453
STA 5093
STA 5103
Applied Statistics
STA 5803
Degree Requirements
The minimum number of semester credit hours required for the degree is
30 for the thesis option and 33 for the nonthesis option.
Thesis Option
A. 3 semester credit hours of a required mathematics course:
EGR 6013
ME 5243
Advanced Thermodynamics
ME 5413
Elasticity
ME 5613
15
6
Nonthesis Option
A. 3 semester credit hours of a required mathematics course:
EGR 6013
ME 5243
Advanced Thermodynamics
ME 5413
Elasticity
ME 5613
21
D. Special Project
D. Thesis
Total Credit Hours
186
33
Admission Requirements
The minimum requirements for admission to the Doctor of Philosophy in
Mechanical Engineering degree program are as follows:
Students must meet the University admission requirements as
outlined in the graduate catalog.
Students whose native language is not English must have a
satisfactory English test score to meet the University admission
requirements.
Satisfactory GRE (Graduate Record Examination) scores, as
evaluated by the Graduate Program Committee of the Department
of Mechanical Engineering, are required in combination with other
criteria for admission to the Doctor of Philosophy in Mechanical
Engineering degree program.
Outstanding students, who do not hold a Master's degree, may enter
the Doctor of Philosophy program on provisional status directly upon
receiving a bachelor's degree in mechanical engineering or a closely
related field, with the approval of the Graduate Studies Committee.
Degree Curriculum
A. Common Core Courses:
1. Required course:
ME 6113
EGR 6023
187
2. Technical area:
a. Thermal and Fluid Systems: Advanced Thermodynamics ,
Advanced Fluid Mechanics
Advanced Thermodynamics
ME 5613
ME 5503
Elasticity
ME 5713
The written qualifying examination includes two (2) parts: Part 1-Common
Area, which is mandatory for all students, and Part 2-Major Area, which is
selected by student from the three technical areas based on their fields of
study.
Research Seminar
20
Doctoral Research
ME 7952
Doctoral Research
ME 7953
Doctoral Research
Doctoral Dissertation
ME 7982
Doctoral Dissertation
ME 7983
Doctoral Dissertation
1. Common area:
a. Advanced Engineering Mathematics
15
Doctoral Candidacy
All students seeking a doctoral degree must be admitted to candidacy
in order to become eligible to continue their research leading to the
Doctoral degree. The requirement for admission to candidacy is passing
the qualifying examination and the dissertation proposal defense.
The student should first consider research topics for his/her dissertation
under the supervision of his/her advisor, and then write and defend a
dissertation proposal based on his/her preliminary studies. The final
dissertation defense should take place within two semesters after passing
the dissertation proposal. Doctoral students have a time to degree
completion of eight years comprised of six years from admissions to
candidacy and two years for dissertation.
For more information on policies and procedures, please see the Ph.D./
ME Handbook online at: http://engineering.utsa.edu/me/programs/
curriculum.html.
Courses
ME 5013. Topics in Mechanical Engineering. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing in engineering or consent of instructor.
Current topics in mechanical engineering, such as advanced fracture
mechanics, lean manufacturing, advanced manufacturing engineering
and advanced energy systems. May be repeated for credit with consent
of Graduate Committee as topics vary.
ME 5113. Advanced Systems Dynamics and Control. (3-0) 3 Credit
Hours.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing in engineering or consent of instructor.
Dynamic modeling of mechanical and multi-energy domain systems;
state-space and frequency-domain analysis of dynamic systems;
feedback control systems; multivariable state-feedback control; principles
of controllability, observability, stability; computer-based simulation
system dynamics. (Formerly titled Advanced Controls.).
188
189
190
191
192
Department of
Anthropology
The Department of Anthropology offers the Master of Arts Degree in
Anthropology and the Doctor of Philosophy Degree in Anthropology.
Master of Arts Degree in Anthropology (p. 193)
Doctor of Philosophy Degree in Anthropology (p. 194)
Application Procedures
The Anthropology Department admits Masters students once a year in
the Fall. The departmental deadline for applications is March 1.
In addition to satisfying the University-wide graduate admission
requirements, applicants should have a 3.3 grade point average in the
last 60 hours of coursework and have successfully taken 1218 hours
of coursework in anthropology. This coursework should include courses
across the subdisciplines of anthropology.
Applicants for admission to the M.A. program in Anthropology must
complete an online application for admission through the UTSA Graduate
School (http://graduateschool.utsa.edu/). For all applicants, including
graduate degree-seeking, non-degree-seeking, and special graduate
students (see Chapter 1, Admission, of this catalog for definitions), the
application to the Master of Arts program in Anthropology consists of
an application form, official academic transcripts, an essay (statement
of purpose), writing sample, and three letters of recommendation. For
graduate degree-seeking applicants, Graduate Record Examination
(GRE) scores must also be submitted to the Graduate School.
Essay: Please write a statement telling us about your intentions for
entering UTSAs M.A. program in Anthropology. This letter should be
approximately 500750 words in length (approximately two to three
double-spaced pages). This statement should include information on:
undergraduate coursework and other relevant experiences (how did
these prepare you for graduate work in Anthropology),
area of subdisciplinary and regional specialization, as well as
particular research interests,
how your academic interests match with faculty, departmental and
university resources,
at least two faculty who would be suitable advisors; and
193
Degree Requirements
The minimum number of semester credit hours required for this degree
is 33 (with thesis). In addition to the Universitys general requirements
for graduate study and any coursework or other study required as
a condition of admission, the Master of Arts degree in Anthropology
requires the following:
A. 9 semester credit hours of required basic courses:
ANT 5023
ANT 5033
ANT 5073
3
15
194
Department of Anthropology
Degree Requirements
6
33
Application Procedures
Applicants for admission to the Ph.D. program in Anthropology must
satisfy all University-wide graduate admission requirements. Applicants
must submit a complete Graduate School Application. Complete
applications include the application form, summary sheet, official
academic transcripts, an essay (750900 word statement of purpose),
a writing sample, and three letters of recommendation. Applicants must
also submit Graduate Record Examination (GRE) scores with their
application. These scores will be considered as only one element in the
evaluation of applicants. Only completed applications will be reviewed.
Applicants whose native language is not English must submit scores
from the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). The English
Language Assessment Procedure is a mandatory assessment for
incoming international students whose TOEFL scores are between 550
and 600 (paper version) or 79 and 100 (Internet version). See Chapter 1,
Admission, of this catalog for details.
ANT 5033
ANT 5073
ANT 6603
Ecological Anthropology
12
33
24
ANT 7011
ANT 7012
ANT 7013
ANT 7021
Doctoral Dissertation
ANT 7022
Doctoral Dissertation
ANT 7023
Doctoral Dissertation
78
Qualifying Examination
Students may take the qualifying examination upon successful
completion of 30 hours of coursework; this coursework must include
all required Doctoral Core courses. At least two months prior to taking
the qualifying examination, the student and the Supervising Professor
will select an Advisory Committee, which needs to be approved by the
Ph.D. Graduate Advisor of Record, and schedule dates for the qualifying
examination. The examination consists of three written literature reviews
in areas most relevant to the students research and will cover issues
of geographical/topical, methodological, and theoretical relevance. It
is intended that the qualifying examination will lay the groundwork for
subsequent dissertation research.
Dissertation Committee
Following successful defense of the dissertation proposal, the student
and the Supervising Professor will select a Dissertation Committee,
which needs to be approved by the Dean of the College and the Dean of
the Graduate School (see Chapter 5, Doctoral Degree Regulations, for
further information on requirements of committee composition).
Advancement to Candidacy
Doctoral students can apply for admission to candidacy once they have
met all requirements for the Doctoral degree other than dissertation
research and write-up. The requirements include successfully completing
all coursework, passing the qualifying examination, passing a foreign
language examination or demonstrating statistical or computer
competency, as applicable, submitting and successfully defending the
dissertation proposal, and forming a Dissertation Committee approved by
the University.
Dissertation
Candidates must demonstrate their ability to conduct independent
research by completing and defending an original dissertation that makes
195
3
18
24
ANT 7011
ANT 7012
ANT 7013
ANT 7021
Doctoral Dissertation
196
Department of Anthropology
ANT 7022
Doctoral Dissertation
ANT 7023
Doctoral Dissertation
48
Qualifying Examination
Students may take the qualifying examination upon successful
completion of 30 hours of coursework; this coursework must include
required Doctoral Core courses. At least two months prior to taking
the qualifying examination, the student and the Supervising Professor
will select an Advisory Committee, which needs to be approved by the
Ph.D. Graduate Advisor of Record, and schedule dates for the qualifying
examination. The examination consists of three written literature reviews
in areas most relevant to the students research and will cover issues
of geographical/topical, methodological, and theoretical relevance. It is
intended that the qualifying examination will help lay the groundwork for
subsequent dissertation research.
Dissertation Committee
Following successful defense of the dissertation proposal, the student
and the Supervising Professor will select a Dissertation Committee,
which needs to be approved by the Dean of the College and the Dean of
the Graduate School (see Chapter 5, Doctoral Degree Regulations, for
further information on requirements of committee composition).
Advancement to Candidacy
Doctoral students can apply for admission to candidacy once they have
met all requirements for the Doctoral degree other than dissertation
research and write-up. The requirements include successfully completing
all coursework, passing the qualifying examination, passing a foreign
language examination or demonstrating statistical or computer
competency, as applicable, submitting and successfully defending the
dissertation proposal, and forming a Dissertation Committee approved by
the University.
Dissertation
Candidates must demonstrate their ability to conduct independent
research by completing and defending an original dissertation that makes
a significant contribution to the field. The student, in consultation with
his or her Supervising Professor, determines the research topic. The
students Dissertation Committee will guide and critique the candidates
research. The Dissertation Committee must unanimously approve the
completed dissertation. The dissertation shall then be defended publicly
Courses
ANT 5023. History, Method, and Theory of Archaeology. (3-0) 3
Credit Hours.
A survey of the history and development of archaeology, research
techniques, and method and theory of prehistoric research. May be
repeated for credit with different instructors.
ANT 5033. Theory in Cultural Anthropology. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
This course surveys the main conceptual, methodological, and theoretical
developments in cultural anthropology. (Formerly titled Paradigms of
Americanist Anthropology.).
ANT 5043. Seminar in Laboratory Methods in Anthropology. (3-0) 3
Credit Hours.
This seminar reviews the physical and technical aspects of analysis of
anthropological materials. May be repeated for credit when topics vary.
ANT 5073. Advanced Biological Anthropology. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
An intensive review of the history of biological anthropology and current
developments in method and theory. Topics will be drawn from the four
major areas of biological anthropology: genetics and evolutionary theory,
human variation and adaptation, primatology, and paleoanthropology.
ANT 5283. Hunters and Gatherers. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
A study of the major issues archaeologists address concerning the
cultural ecology and cultural evolution of hunters and gatherers around
the world.
ANT 5313. Seminar in Archaeological Research Techniques. (3-0) 3
Credit Hours.
This course addresses key archaeological research strategies involved
in the acquisition and analysis of archaeological data. Topics may
include survey and excavation strategies as well as analyses of various
archaeological materials, such as ceramics or lithics. The course
highlights the integration of these techniques into broader research
designs and their application to important questions about the past. May
be repeated for credit when topics vary.
ANT 5413. Seminar in the Prehistory of Texas and Adjacent Areas.
(3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Intensive study of prehistoric and early historic aboriginal cultures of
Texas and adjacent areas. Focus is on problems of interpretation,
current archaeological research of the region, and the impact of federal
legislation on Texas archaeology.
ANT 5453. Seminar on the Archaeology of the American Southwest
and Adjacent Regions. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Review of the major prehistoric cultures of the American Southwest,
including the Anasazi, Mogollon, and Hohokam cultural regions and
adjacent areas. Emphasis is on current research.
197
ANT 5633. Peoples of Mexico and Central America since 1492. (3-0)
3 Credit Hours.
This course brings together archaeology, ethnography, and ethnohistory
to examine the societies and cultures of Mexico and Central America
since European Contact, with a focus on indigenous peoples. Topics
discussed include native responses to conquest and colonialism; the
transformation of Native American economies; and recent indigenous
political movements.
ANT 5643. Primates in Ecological Communities. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
This course is a community ecology class focusing on the interactions
that primates have with other species and with their habitat. Specific
topics to be explored include: models of species diversity, coexistence
mechanisms, determinants of primate community density, coevolution,
competition, species packing, assembly rules, conservation, and primateplant interactions such as seed dispersal and pollination.
ANT 6133. Seminar in Medical Anthropology. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
This course offers a study of selected topics in contemporary theories
and their application in medical anthropology. Topics include crosscultural and biocultural approaches to the study of sickness, healing,
and healing systems; critical approaches to the study of biomedicine,
globalization and international health; meaning-centered approaches
to understanding the experience of suffering and pain; and ecological
approaches to understanding the relationship between human health,
cultural processes, and the environment.
ANT 6213. Topics in the Anthropology of Native North America. (3-0)
3 Credit Hours.
An organized course examining topics of current interest to
anthropologists with a focus on North America. May be repeated for
credit.
ANT 6223. The Archaeology of Household and Residence. (3-0) 3
Credit Hours.
This course examines the data, methods, and theories used to
reconstruct the composition and activities of domestic groups. The
relevance of household studies in archaeology is stressed through
inspection of the economic, political, and ideological links between
domestic groups and broader social formations.
ANT 6233. Topics in the Anthropology of Complex Societies. (3-0) 3
Credit Hours.
Attention focuses on issues central to the comparative study of ancient
complex societies. Topics may include, but are not limited to, the
development of hierarchical political systems; the nature of divine
kingship; agricultural intensification and surplus production; and the
collapse of socio-political systems. May be repeated for credit when
topics vary.
ANT 6303. Seminar in Research Design and Proposal Writing. (3-0) 3
Credit Hours.
This course familiarizes students with the philosophical foundations of
social science research, the structure and types of research designs,
and pragmatic considerations of data acquisition and analysis. The
relationship between theory and research design and methods is
emphasized. The final project is a scholarly research proposal.
ANT 6353. Field Research Methods in Cultural Anthropology. (3-0) 3
Credit Hours.
The study and practice of field research methods of cultural anthropology
emphasizing participant observation and use of informants.
198
Department of Anthropology
199
ANT 6873. Energy, the Brain and the Gut in Primate and Human
Evolution. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
This course centers on the brain and gut in human and primate evolution.
This will include evaluations of the interactions between these two
anatomical systems and their relationship with the acquisition of energy
in the diet of fossil hominins, modern humans, and nonhuman primates.
Other topics include the anatomy of the gut and brain, metabolism,
dietary quality and energy, digestion, and interactions between the gut
and brain.
200
Department of Anthropology
Application
The Graduate School application for the M.F.A. is available online at
http://graduateschool.utsa.edu/. A complete application includes the
application form, personal contact information, educational background,
transcripts, a statement of intent concerning graduate school, an
artists statement about the applicants work, and three letters of
recommendation (forms printable from the online application). The
Graduate Record Examination (GRE) is not required as part of the
application for the M.F.A.
Portfolio
The portfolio is the most important part of the application for admission.
Applicants should submit 20 images that best exemplify their most
recent creative work. Do not send original works of art. Portfolios may be
submitted as twenty 35mm slides or as a PowerPoint presentation on CD
or USB flash drive. The portfolio (slide or digital) must have an attached
sheet listing titles, dates, dimensions, and media of each work. Video
should be submitted on DVD labeled with titles, dates, and total running
time. No more than fifteen minutes will be reviewed. Please do not use
adhesive labels on CD/DVD discslabel with permanent marker directly
on the label side of the disc.
The portfolio must be submitted directly to: Graduate Advisor of Record,
The Department of Art and Art History, One UTSA Circle, San Antonio,
TX 78249.
Deadlines for receipt of portfolios are:
201
Departmental Requirements
All M.F.A. program graduate students are required to accrue a minimum
of 60 clock hours of service to the student-run UTSA Satellite Space
in the form of preparatory duties, Gallery sitting and maintenance on the
exhibition space.
Degree Requirements
A minimum of 60 semester credit hours is required for the Master of Fine
Arts degree, exclusive of coursework or other study required to remove
admission deficiencies. Full-time enrollment of 9 or more semester credit
hours during regular semesters is expected of degree-seeking students.
In addition to satisfying all University-wide requirements, M.F.A. students
must pass a First Semester Review, Semester End Progress Reviews,
Advancement Review (available after completion of 24 semester credit
hours of the program of study), a Candidacy Review (available in the
fourth semester after completion of 36 to 42 semester credit hours of the
program of study), and a final M.F.A. Oral Examination. Courses in which
a grade of C or lower is earned will not count toward the minimum 60
hours required for the M.F.A. degree.
1. A focused program of study in studio art (ART) including ART 6023 30
Graduate Studio Seminar
2. Art electives outside the students specialized area of study
3. Free Elective
4. Art history and criticism (AHC) including AHC 5123 Seminar in
Research Methods and Writing
5. ART 6843 Master of Fine Arts Exhibition
Total Credit Hours
12
3
12
3
60
202
knowledge of the history of European art, art of the Americas, and areas
of concentration. The Comprehensive Examination must be taken during
or immediately after the semester in which students complete their
coursework and before completion of the thesis.
with the Graduate Advisor of Record (GAR) for Art History for advice
concerning appropriate courses and instructors.
Application Materials
Application to the program is submitted online through the Graduate
Schools Web site at http://graduateschool.utsa.edu/. Students can obtain
information, detailed instructions of what additional material they must
submit (three letters of recommendation, Graduate Record Examination
(GRE) scores, official transcripts, a writing sample, and statement of
intent), as well as forms, from the Graduate Schools Web site. Deadlines
for all materials for each term can be found on the same Web site.
Degree Requirements
The minimum number of semester credit hours required for this degree,
exclusive of coursework or other study required to remove admission
deficiencies, is 36. Students are required to pass a language examination
demonstrating a reading knowledge of a foreign language; in most
cases, this will be Spanish. The suitability of another language will
be determined by the students advisor. This test must be completed
before the student earns 18 semester credit hours of graduate work in
this program. Courses in which a grade of C or lower is earned will
not count toward the minimum 36 semester credit hours required for
the Master of Arts degree in Art History. Students accepted into the
Master of Arts degree program in Art History are required to maintain a
minimum of 3 semester credit hours of enrollment for all Fall and Spring
semesters while and until the degree is completed. Failure to enroll will
result in forfeiture of the students status as an accepted candidate in
the program. Exceptions to this requirement are granted only due to
extraordinary circumstances as determined by the review and approval of
the Graduate Advisor of Record and the Department Chairperson.
A. 3 semester credit hour required:
AHC 5123
21
AHC 5813
AHC 5823
AHC 5833
AHC 5843
AHC 5853
AHC 5863
AHC 6813
AHC 6833
AHC 6843
AHC 6913
36
203
204
Department of
Communication
The Department of Communication offers the Master of Arts Degree in
Communication.
Admission Requirements
In addition to satisfying University-wide admission requirements,
applicants must meet the following Communication requirements for
unconditional admission:
1. Submit scores from the Graduate Record Examination (GRE) general
test.
2. Provide two letters of recommendation from academic sources
with the option of an additional letter from either an academic or a
professional source (no more than three letters should be submitted).
Letters from academic sources are expected, but if the applicant
has been out of school for a significant period of time, letters from
professional sources who can attest to the applicants academic
potential may be considered.
3. Provide a statement of purpose, 500750 words in length, describing
the applicants academic and other qualifications to be admitted to
this program, areas of interest in the program, and goals related to
pursuing the Masters degree in Communication.
The number of students admitted to this program may be limited.
Degree Requirements
The minimum number of semester credit hours required for this degree is
36, exclusive of coursework or other study required to remove admission
deficiencies. Any grade lower than B (3.0 on a 4.0 scale) in a graduate
course will not count toward the 36 semester credit hours of coursework
required in items A through E.
Candidates for the degree must complete the following requirements:
A. 15 semester credit hours of core courses:
COM 5003
COM 5013
Communication Theory
COM 5023
COM 5033
COM 5103
205
COM 6931
Directed Readings
COM 6932
Directed Readings
COM 6933
Directed Readings
COM 6941
Internship in Communication
COM 6942
Internship in Communication
COM 6943
Internship in Communication
COM 6951
Independent Study
COM 6952
Independent Study
COM 6953
Independent Study
36
206
Department of Communication
Courses
COM 5003. Introduction to Graduate Studies in Communication.
(3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: Admission to the Master of Arts Program in Communication
or consent of instructor. Tracks the development of research and practice
in communication stressing integration of inquiry, theory, and practice as
well as grounding in various areas of specialized study. Emphasis on the
development of skills critical to success in graduate-level communication
study.
COM 5013. Communication Theory. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: Completion of or concurrent enrollment in COM 5003,
or consent of instructor. Critical review of the historical roots, major
paradigms, and current status of communication theory. Special
emphasis on the diversity of theoretical approaches and applications as
well as the integral relationship of theory and research.
COM 5023. Quantitative Research Methods. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: Completion of or concurrent enrollment in COM 5003,
or consent of instructor. Introduces social scientific approaches
to communication inquiry. Focus is on design, measurement, and
data analysis of quantitative research. Covers principal descriptive
and inferential statistics (e.g., univariate and multivariate) applied in
communication research. Demonstrates techniques in data analysis using
computer programs. Students apply course concepts by evaluating and
conducting research projects.
COM 5033. Qualitative Research Methods. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: Completion of or concurrent enrollment in COM 5003,
or consent of instructor. Introduces humanistic approaches to
communication inquiry. Focus is on design, coding, analysis, data
interpretation, and reporting of qualitative research. Examines a variety
of qualitative research methods as well as challenges facing researchers
in diverse contexts. Students apply course concepts by evaluating and
conducting research projects.
COM 5103. Theories and Applications of Communication. (3-0) 3
Credit Hours.
Prerequisites: Completion of or concurrent enrollment in COM
5003 and COM 5013. Integration of theory and application in one
or more contextual areas of communication, such as interpersonal
communication, organizational communication, new media, international
communication, intercultural communication, health communication or
issues management. May be repeated for credit when topics vary, but not
more than 9 hours will apply to the Masters degree in Communication
without the permission of the Graduate Program Committee.
COM 5113. Communication and College Level Instruction. (3-0) 3
Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: Admission to the Master of Arts Program in Communication
or consent of instructor. This course facilitates understanding of the major
issues in teaching at the college level. In this graduate-level seminar,
emphasis will be placed on the conceptualization, design, development,
and management of college-level courses in communication and other
allied areas. Assignments will include syllabi development, assignment
development, grading rubrics, lesson plans, record keeping methods, and
short written assignments describing personal development as a collegelevel instructor.
COM 5623. New Media Design and Production II. (3-0) 3 Credit
Hours.
Prerequisite: COM 5613. Advanced study of information design theories
and practice. Emphasizes new media production techniques. The course
includes integration of theory with research and/or practice.
COM 5813. International Communication. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: COM 5103. Exploration of global media systems,
transnational information flows, and their impacts. Issues surrounding
globalization, media representation, development communication and
communication policy are examined. The course includes integration of
theory with research and/or practice.
COM 5823. Intercultural Communication. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: COM 5103. Examination of communication dynamics
in diverse societies and between different cultural communities. The
interactions among communication, culture, and identity are explored
within historical and contemporary perspectives. The course includes
integration of theory with research and/or practice.
COM 5973. Topics in Communication. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisites: COM 5003 and COM 5103, or consent of instructor.
Intensive study of one or more specific issues in communication. May be
repeated for credit when topics vary, but not more than 6 hours will apply
to the Masters degree.
COM 6931. Directed Readings. (1-0) 1 Credit Hour.
Prerequisites: Graduate standing and permission of the Graduate
Program Committee. Reading, research, discussion, and writing under
the direction of a member of the graduate faculty. Enables students to
explore/prepare an area of specialization when other appropriate classes
are unavailable. May be repeated for credit, but not more than 3 hours
will apply to the Masters degree.
COM 6932. Directed Readings. (2-0) 2 Credit Hours.
Prerequisites: Graduate standing and permission of the Graduate
Program Committee. Reading, research, discussion, and writing under
the direction of a member of the graduate faculty. Enables students to
explore/prepare an area of specialization when other appropriate classes
are unavailable. May be repeated for credit, but not more than 3 hours
will apply to the Masters degree.
COM 6933. Directed Readings. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisites: Graduate standing and permission of the Graduate
Program Committee. Reading, research, discussion, and writing under
the direction of a member of the graduate faculty. Enables students to
explore/prepare an area of specialization when other appropriate classes
are unavailable. May be repeated for credit, but not more than 3 hours
will apply to the Masters degree.
COM 6941. Internship in Communication. (0-0) 1 Credit Hour.
Prerequisites: Graduate standing and permission in writing (form
available) of the instructor and Graduate Advisor of Record. Supervised
experience, relevant to the students program of study, within selected
organizations. Must be taken on a credit/no-credit basis. May be repeated
for credit, but not more than 3 hours will apply to the Masters degree.
COM 6942. Internship in Communication. (0-0) 2 Credit Hours.
Prerequisites: Graduate standing and permission in writing (form
available) of the instructor and Graduate Advisor of Record. Supervised
experience, relevant to the students program of study, within selected
organizations. Must be taken on a credit/no-credit basis. May be repeated
for credit, but not more than 3 hours will apply to the Masters degree.
207
208
Department of Communication
Department of English
Creative Writing
Post-colonial and Cultural Studies
Others as approved by the M.A. in English Graduate Program
Committee
Admission Requirements
In addition to satisfying the University-wide graduate admission
requirements, the applicant must have completed at least 18 semester
credit hours of work (exclusive of freshman courses) in English with a
grade point average of 3.3 (on a 4.0 scale) in all work taken in English at
the upper-division and graduate levels. This work must include at least
12 semester credit hours of upper-division English literature courses, and
the student must have a grade point average of 3.3 in these courses. The
applicant must submit scores from the Graduate Record Examination
(GRE) General Test. These scores, considered in comparison with
scores from applicants of similar socioeconomic background, will be used
as one element in the evaluation of the applicant.
Degree Requirements
The minimum number of semester credit hours required for this degree,
exclusive of coursework or other study required to remove admission
deficiencies, is 36. Any grade lower than B in a graduate course will
not count toward the 36 semester credit hours of coursework required in
items A and B below.
Degree candidates must complete the following requirements:
A. 24 semester credit hours in the major, distributed as follows:
1. Core Courses:
ENG 5053
2. Prescribed electives:
Admission Requirements
36
Students who have a grade point average of 3.3 or better, and with
approval of the M.A. Graduate Advisor, may choose to include electives
from outside of English.
ENG 5013
209
12
210
Department of English
Language Requirement
Degree Requirements
Admission to Candidacy
The minimum number of semester credit hours required for this degree,
exclusive of coursework or other study required to remove admission
deficiencies, is 39 graduate hours beyond the Masters degree.
Students who are accepted into the Doctoral program without a Masters
degree must complete all requirements for the Master of Arts degree in
English or its equivalent. Courses in which students receive any grade
lower than B will not count toward the 39 semester credit hours of
coursework required in items A through D.
Degree candidates for the Doctoral degree must complete the following
requirements:
A. Core Curriculum:
ENG 5183
or ENG 6023
ENG 6013
ENG 6053
ENG 7053
ENG 7063
ENG 7073
B. Seminars:
C. Electives:
1. Select one of the following prescribed electives:
ENG 6023
ENG 6033
ENG 6063
D. Doctoral research:
ENG 7311
Doctoral Dissertation
ENG 7313
Doctoral Dissertation
37
211
Courses
The Graduate Certificate in Rhetoric and Composition is a 12-semestercredit-hour concentration available to degree-seeking students who
have been admitted to any UTSA graduate program, as well as special
graduate students who meet all the requirements outlined in the UTSA
Graduate Catalog.
ENG 5133
3
9
ENG 6023
ENG 6033
ENG 7113
Courses may be repeated when topics vary but not more than 6 hours
of any one course may be applied to the certificate. No course in which
a grade lower than B is earned may be used to complete a Graduate
Certificate in Rhetoric and Composition. In order to receive this certificate,
students must maintain a 3.0 or better grade point average in the above
courses.
Individuals interested in the Graduate Certificate in Rhetoric and
Composition should contact the Graduate Office of the Department of
English.
212
Department of English
213
Department of History
Proseminar in History
HIS 6903
This sequence will vary in subject. A student must take HIS 6813
Proseminar in History and then HIS 6903 Research Seminar
in History in consecutive long semesters. Note: HIS 5003
Introduction to History: Theories and Methods is a prerequisite for
enrollment in HIS 6813.
Sequence II:
HIS 6983
18
2. A grade point average of 3.2 or better (on a 4.0 scale) in the last 60
hours of undergraduate education or a 3.2 in graduate work; and a
grade point average of 3.2 or better in all History courses taken.
Degree Requirements
The minimum number of semester credit hours required for this degree is
30. This is exclusive of coursework or other study required for admission.
Degree candidates must complete the following requirements:
A. 3 semester credit hours:
Sequence I:
HIS 5003
214
30
Courses
HIS 5003. Introduction to History: Theories and Methods. (3-0) 3
Credit Hours.
This course provides students with an introduction to the discipline of
history. The course considers how historians conceptualize and conduct
the study of history by asking historical questions, critically analyzing
primary and secondary works, conducting archival and library research
(both traditional and electronic), and developing and critiquing sets of
arguments. The course considers competing approaches to the study of
historical processes and how historians categories of analysis change
over time. (Students must enroll in this course in the first semester of their
program.).
HIS 5053. Topics in Medieval Europe. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
An examination of the major problems in the history of medieval Europe,
from the second to the fourteenth centuries. The course focuses on
changing interpretations in medieval history but also stresses the reading
of primary texts.
HIS 5063. Topics in Early Modern European History. (3-0) 3 Credit
Hours.
An examination of the major historiographical and historical problems
in early modern European history, from the fourteenth century to the
seventeenth century.
215
Department of History
HIS 5313. South Texas: Rural and Urban. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
An overview and analysis of the development of South Texas, from preColumbian cultures to the rise of urbanization. Emphasis on Spanish
exploration and settlement of Nuevo Santander, contact with indigenous
cultures, the impact of nineteenth-century warfare, and the rapid
transformation of the region through urbanization.
HIS 5323. The U.S.Mexico Border. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
This course will examine social, economic, and political conditions
shaping the character of the United States-Mexico border region. Using
a transnational approach, students will have an opportunity to explore
the history of the border as a bicultural region, and to examine issues
relevant to the development of the border area. Topics of interest may
include urbanization, industrialization, gender, trade, migration, security,
and ecological problems.
HIS 5423. Colonial Mexico. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
A detailed examination of the Spanish conquest and colonization of
Mexico from 1521 to Independence. Special attention is paid to the
transformation of Indian society under Spanish rule, the development of
the colonial economy, and the formation of an interrelated colonial elite.
HIS 5433. Modern Mexico. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Examines the history of Mexico following independence from Spain in
1821. Consideration is given to the disintegration of the colonial system,
nineteenth-century reforms, the Porfiriato, the Mexican Revolution, and
their effects on contemporary Mexico. Students may have the opportunity
to work in Mexico.
HIS 5453. The French Revolution and the Greater Caribbean. (3-0) 3
Credit Hours.
This course explores the French Revolution and its impact on the French
colonies in the western hemisphere. The course provides a comparative
analysis of notions of citizenship and the variety of factors that shaped
the practice of rights before, during, and after the revolutionary struggle in
both France and the Greater Caribbean.
HIS 5653. Modern Chinese History. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
This course provides an overview of Chinese history since 1550, with
particular attention to the major historiographical debates in recent
scholarship. Topics may vary, and the latest ones include ethnic and
cultural identities in modern China and themes in local and transnational
history.
HIS 5693. Indian Subcontinent. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
This course provides students with an opportunity to learn about the
cultures and histories of the Indian subcontinent. Particular attention
will be paid to the major historiographical debates in recent scholarship.
Topics will vary and may include India, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Nepal, Sri
Lanka, and/or Bangladesh.
HIS 5733. Migration in Historical Context. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
What has caused people to migrate as individuals and as groups? To
what extent has geographical mobility been a function of economic
mobilization, political transformation, social upheaval, and/or
technological revolution? How has the migratory process, in turn, affected
the migrants themselves, both in their place of origin, and in the host
society? This course is a graduate-level exploration of these and other
related questions on migration and may be explicitly comparative.
Specific theme, regional focus, and time period may vary and may draw
from a variety of historical situations.
216
HIS 6913. Making History in the Digital Age. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
This course will explore some of the newer applications of information
technology for presenting history to students and the public. Training will
be offered in developing multimedia presentations for the classroom or
public spaces, such as museums and the Web. Prior experience with
computers is not required.
HIS 6923. Teaching Practicum. (0-0) 3 Credit Hours.
This course is designed to assist advanced graduate students in
developing their instructional skills for a career in college teaching. The
primary focus will be to translate the best pedagogy on student learning
into the practical design and conduct of history courses, including such
elements as syllabi, lectures, discussions, exams and other assignments,
and grading. Students will work closely with a specific undergraduate
instructor in a specific class.
HIS 6951. Independent Study. (0-0) 1 Credit Hour.
Prerequisites: Graduate standing and permission in writing (form
available) of the instructor and the students Graduate Advisor of Record.
Independent reading, research, discussion, and/or writing under the
direction of a faculty member. For students needing specialized work not
normally or not often available as part of the regular course offerings.
May be repeated for credit, but not more than 6 hours, regardless of
discipline, will apply to the Masters degree.
217
Department of History
Department of Modern
Languages and
Literatures
36
Application Materials
In addition to filing the regular University application for admission,
all applicants must submit to the Spanish Graduate Committee, for
evaluation, a one- to two-page statement written in Spanish describing
the objectives of proposed graduate study and at least one letter of
recommendation from a prior teacher or professional colleague.
Program Requirements
The Certificate in Spanish Translation Studies consists of 15 semester
credit hours including an introduction to theory and practice and the
meta-language of translation studies. Courses in Spanish linguistics
strengthen the interdisciplinary underpinnings of the Certificate, and
the practicum, FL 6013 Practicum in Translation, provides training in
and reinforcement of written and/or oral translation skills by means of
a translation case study, a supervised internship, or a service learning
project.
Degree Requirements
The number of semester credit hours required for this degree, exclusive
of coursework or other study required to remove admission deficiencies,
is 36. A maximum of one grade of C shall be applicable toward
coursework for the Master of Arts degree.
218
FL 5043
SPN 6083
SPN 6973
Special Problems
SPN 5843
SPN 5853
219
SPN 5883
SPN 5893
Spanish Dialects
3
15
Students will take the Practicum during their last semester of enrollment
in the Certificate Program. In consultation with the instructor, they will
select an area of interest and define a task within that area. Project
translation work will normally be exclusively into the students dominant
language.
220
221
Department of Music
The Department of Music offers the following: Master of Music Degree,
Graduate Certificate in Keyboard Pedagogy, Graduate Certificate in
Keyboard Performance, Graduate Certificate in Voice Pedagogy.
Degree Requirements
The minimum number of semester credit hours required for this degree,
exclusive of coursework or other study required to remove admission
deficiencies, is 31 to 36 hours depending on the emphasis. Courses
in which a grade of C or lower is earned are not applicable toward
coursework for the Master of Music degree.
Degree candidates must complete the following requirements:
A. 9 semester credit hours in music history, music theory, and
research:
MUS 5133
MUS 5233
MUS 5263
Rehearsal Techniques
MUS 5554
MUS 6941
Recital
MUS 5554
MUS 6941
Recital
MUS 5542
MUS 5572
MUS 6941
Recital
Music Education
MUS 5554
MUS 6903
MUS 6941
Recital
MUS 5542
222
Music Education
MUS 5403
MUS 5423
MUS 5523
Rehearsal Techniques
MUS 6423
Ensemble Repertoire
MUS 6911
Recital Document
Performance Repertoire
MUS 6911
Recital Document
2-10
223
Department of Music
MUS 5421
MUS 6903
MUS 5433
Performance Repertoire
MUS 6971
MUS 6903
MUS 5433
Performance Repertoire
MUS 5533
MUS 5572
MUS 6911
Recital Document
Music Education
MUS 5542
Music Performance
15
31-36
MUS 5583
MUS 5711
MUS 6941
15
The Certificate in Voice Pedagogy is designed for the active private voice
teacher who is interested in continuing their education through a program
that is focused on practical courses in their field. Admission requirements
to the Certificate Program are the same as admission requirements to the
Master of Music program (audition, three letters of reference, and a grade
point average of 3.0 on the last 60 hours of undergraduate work).
MUS 5421
MUS 5533
MUS 5542
Music Performance
MUS 5572
MUS 5533
MUS 5542
Music Performance
MUS 5572
MUS 6903
MUS 6972
Special Problems
15
Courses
MUS 5003. Graduate Music Theory Review. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Designed to satisfy deficiencies indicated by the Graduate Music Theory
Placement Examination. Harmonic analysis, part-writing, form, sightsinging and aural skills, as well as twentieth-century materials will be
reviewed. A grade of B or higher is required before taking further
graduate studies in music theory. Cannot be counted toward any Master
of Music degree program.
MUS 5013. Graduate Music History Review. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Designed to satisfy deficiencies indicated by the Graduate Music History
Placement Examination. Surveys the styles, periods, composers, and
historical developments of Western art music. A grade of B or higher is
required before taking further graduate studies in music history. Cannot
be counted toward any Master of Music degree program.
MUS 5023. Graduate Music Pedagogy Review. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Designed to satisfy deficiencies indicated by the Graduate Pedagogy
Placement Examination. Anatomy, physiology, acoustics, lifespan
development and performing arts health issues will be reviewed. A grade
of B or higher is required before taking further graduate studies in
music pedagogy. Cannot be counted toward any Master of Music degree
program.
MUS 5031. Graduate Music Diction Review. (1-0) 1 Credit Hour.
Designed to satisfy deficiencies indicated by the Lyric Diction Diagnostic
Examination. A comprehensive review and study of the basic rules of
German, French, and Italian lyric diction, using the International Phonetic
Alphabet to analyze and transcribe vocal repertoire. Cannot be counted
toward any Master of Music degree program.
MUS 5042. Graduate Aural Skills Review. (2-0) 2 Credit Hours.
Designed to satisfy deficiencies indicated by the Graduate Aural Skills
Placement Examination. Offers an overview of sight-singing methodology
and ear training techniques, as well as an opportunity to train in aural
skills with an emphasis on rhythmic, melodic, and harmonic materials. A
grade of "B" or higher is required before taking further graduate studies
in music theory. Cannot be counted toward any Master of Music degree
program.
MUS 5133. Topics in Music Theory. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing in music. A study of selected areas of
music theory. Topics may include twentieth-century analytical techniques,
Schenkerian analysis, theory pedagogy, performance and analysis,
history of theory, theory and aesthetics of music, and rhythmic analysis.
May be repeated for credit when topics vary. Topics may be taken
concurrently.
MUS 5163. Composition. (0-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisites: Graduate standing in music and consent of instructor.
Private study for the development of techniques and tools for
composition, with emphasis on the craft of writing chamber works for
various media in contemporary styles. Seminar attendance may be
required. May be repeated for credit when topics vary. Topics may be
taken concurrently.
MUS 5223. Ensemble Repertoire. (0-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing in music. A study of repertoire for
ensembles including a historical perspective. Topics are (1) Choral; (2)
Instrumental; and (3) Keyboard. May be repeated for credit.
224
225
Department of Music
226
Department of
Philosophy and Classics
The Department of Philosophy and Classics offers the Master of Arts
degree in Philosophy.
227
Degree Requirements
The minimum number of semester credit hours required for this degree
is 30 (thesis), or 33 (non-thesis). In addition to the Universitys general
requirements for graduate study and any coursework or other study
required as a condition of admission, the Master of Arts degree in
Philosophy requires the following:
A. 6 semester credit hours of required basic courses:
PHI 5003
Logic
or PHI 5013
Advanced Logic
PHI 5033
Ancient Philosophy
PHI 5123
Modern Philosophy
PHI 5133
PHI 6143
PHI 6153
Ethical Theory
PHI 5223
Epistemology
PHI 5243
Metaphysics
PHI 5253
Philosophy of Religion
PHI 5263
Philosophy of Language
PHI 5273
PHI 6973
9-12
6
Masters Thesis
or
PHI 6943
Internship
30-33
228
Comprehensive Examination
In addition to the semester credit hour requirements set forth above,
all candidates for the degree are required to pass the comprehensive
examination. The examination will be administered once the student has
successfully completed 18 semester credit hours as well as PHI 5033
Philosophical Writing and Research and either PHI 5003 Logic or PHI
5013 Advanced Logic. Satisfactory performance on the comprehensive
examination is required for advancement to thesis research and writing.
Students will select an examination from a list of topics prepared by the
faculty and advertised in advance.
Courses
PHI 5003. Logic. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisites: Graduate standing and consent of the graduate advisor.
This course aims to give students a strong grounding in the logical skills
required for advanced philosophical study, focusing on first order logic
with identity and introducing students to selected other relevant topics as
appropriate, such as extensions to first order logic (e.g., modal, temporal,
deontic logics), metalogic, set theory, probability theory or other topics
of both logical and philosophical interest (e.g., counterfactuals). May be
repeated for credit when the topics vary.
PHI 5013. Advanced Logic. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisites: Graduate standing and consent of the graduate advisor.
Rigorous definitions of syntax and semantics. Proofs of soundness
and completeness of sentential and predicate logics; other topics in
metatheory. May include extensions of and alternatives to classical logic
and the philosophical significance of logic and metalogical results. May
be repeated for credit when the topics vary.
PHI 5023. Ethical Theory. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisites: Graduate standing and consent of the graduate advisor.
Advanced study of ethical theories and the nature and scope of
ethical requirements, value, virtue, duty and moral responsibility.
Advanced study may emphasize specific approaches to ethics such as
consequentialist, deontological, virtue theoretic, and contractarian or
specific metaethical issues such as ethics and rationality. Readings will
include selected classical and contemporary texts.
PHI 5033. Philosophical Writing and Research. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing. The course aims to enhance
philosophical reading, critical evaluation and writing skills; it aims further
to help develop techniques in research and refine oral communication
and presentation skills.
PHI 5113. Ancient Philosophy. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisites: Graduate standing and consent of the graduate advisor. Indepth investigation of central figures and/or topics in ancient philosophy.
Study may focus on a few major philosophical figures in the ancient world
from the time of the pre-Socratics through to the Hellenistic and NeoPlatonic schools. Topics may include the nature of reality, theories of
truth, ethical theories, psychological issues, political theory, or issues in
logic and theories of meaning.
PHI 5123. Modern Philosophy. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisites: Graduate standing and consent of the graduate advisor.
Advanced study of major figures in modern philosophy such as
Descartes, Locke, Berkeley, Hume, Spinoza, Leibniz, and Kant.
Discussion may focus on the seminal work of one of more major thinkers
such as the Meditations, Critique of Pure Reason, Ethics, or Theodicy.
229
Department of Political
Science and Geography
The Department of Political Science and Geography offer the Master of
Arts Degree in Political Science.
Master of Arts Degree in Geography (p. 231)
Master of Arts Degree in Political Science (p. 230)
Returning Students
Masters students who have not been in attendance for two full years will
have their status changed to inactive. An inactive student may reapply to
the program, but they must file a new application for graduate admission,
along with a nonrefundable application fee, by the application deadline
230
Degree Requirements
The minimum number of semester credit hours required for the degree is
36.
Degree candidates must complete the following requirements:
A. 6 semester credit hours of methodological core courses:
POL 5003
Political Inquiry
POL 5013
Research Methods
Political Philosophy
POL 5153
Political Economy
POL 5033
POL 5103
POL 5113
Latino/a Politics
POL 5133
POL 5163
POL 5173
Policy Process
POL 5183
Congress
POL 5193
Presidency
POL 5233
Political Creativity
POL 5403
POL 5413
POL 5433
Electoral Behavior
POL 5463
POL 5503
POL 5563
Seminar in Jurisprudence
POL 5623
Federalism
International Politics
POL 5063
POL 5153
International Politics
18
231
POL 5303
POL 5333
European Politics
POL 5363
Mexican Politics
POL 5373
Human Rights
POL 5703
POL 5713
POL 5723
International Organizations
POL 5733
POL 5743
POL 5773
POL 5783
International Security
POL 5793
POL 5823
POL 5853
Economic Geography
POL 5873
Global Governance
POL 5903
POL 5943
Political Philosophy
POL 5213
POL 5253
Issues of Immigration
POL 5273
POL 5503
POL 5563
Seminar in Jurisprudence
Masters Thesis
or
POL 6993
36
Returning Students
Masters students who have not been in attendance for two full years will
have their status changed to inactive. An inactive student may reapply
to the program but must file a new application for graduate admission,
along with a nonrefundable application fee, by the application deadline
and meet the catalog requirements and admission conditions in effect
at the time of reapplication. All returning students will be subject to a full
course review in the program. Courses over six years old may need to
be repeated (see section Repeating Courses in Chapter 2, General
Academic Regulations, in this catalog).
Students who wish to take courses in the program without earning credit
toward a Masters degree may apply as non-degree-seeking students.
Upon admission to the Graduate Program, all students must meet with
the Graduate Advisor of Record for the department as well as their
Faculty Subfield Advisor (assigned at time of admission) before enrolling
in coursework.
GRG 5753
Degree Requirements
GRG 5903
GRG 5913
The minimum number of semester credit hours required for the degree
is 36 for the nonthesis option, and 33 for the thesis option. To be able to
graduate in the minimum time period (two years) students should take all
the GRG courses as they are offered each semester.
All degree candidates must complete the following requirements:
Nonthesis Option
A. 18 semester credit hours of required coures:
GRG 5003
18
GRG 5433
GRG 5513
GRG 5753
GRG 5903
GRG 5913
Economic Geography
GRG 5323
GRG 5353
GRG 5403
Seminar in Biogeography
GRG 5413
Climatology
GRG 5603
Geopolitics
ANT 6653
ANT 6723
GEO 6513
Advanced GIS
PAD 5503
POL 5793
SOC 6043
URP 5363
DEM 7093
12
GRG 5433
GRG 5513
GRG 5353
GRG 5403
Seminar in Biogeography
GRG 5413
Climatology
GRG 5603
Geopolitics
3
ANT 6653
ANT 6723
DEM 7093
GEO 6513
Advanced GIS
PAD 5503
POL 5793
SOC 6043
URP 5363
C. Thesis
GRG 6893
GRG 6983
Master's Thesis
GRG 6961
Comprehensive Examination
33
Comprehensive Examination
Comprehensive Examination
D. Comprehensive Examination
36
Thesis Option
GRG 5003
Economic Geography
GRG 5323
GRG 5303
ANT 5483
D. Comprehensive Examination
232
18
233
234
235
236
237
238
Department of
Psychology
The Department of Psychology offers the Master of Science Degree in
Psychology and the Doctor of Philosophy Degree in Psychology.
Master of Science Degree in Psychology (p. 239)
Doctor of Philosophy Degree in Psychology (p. 240)
239
Degree Requirements
The minimum number of semester credit hours required for this degree,
exclusive of coursework or other study required to remove admission
deficiencies, is 36. Typically, students complete the program in two years
(taking three courses a semester, excluding summers) or three years
(taking two courses a semester, excluding summers).
Degree candidates must complete the following requirements:
A. 15 semester credit hours of core courses:
PSY 5113
PSY 5213
Research Design
PSY 5413
Inferential Statistics
PSY 6113
Psychological Measurement
PSY 6213
Developmental Psychology
PSY 5313
Seminar in Psychopathology
PSY 5323
PSY 5333
Social Psychology
PSY 5343
Human Cognition
PSY 5353
Industrial/Organizational Psychology
PSY 5363
Health Psychology
PSY 5383
Biological Psychology
PSY 5393
Research Internship
PSY 6951
Independent Study
PSY 6953
Independent Study
PSY 6973
Masters Thesis
PSY 6983
Masters Thesis
PSY 6986
Masters Thesis
15
240
Department of Psychology
36
Degree Requirements
PSY 7013
PSY 7023
PSY 7113
PSY 7123
PSY 7133
PSY 7143
Epidemiology
PSY 6973
PSY 7203
Grant Development
PSY 7213
Program Evaluation
STA 6253
STA 6413
Nonparametric Statistics
STA 6113
STA 6853
Doctoral Research
PSY 7912
Doctoral Research
PSY 7913
Doctoral Research
PSY 7914
Doctoral Research
PSY 7915
Doctoral Research
PSY 7916
Doctoral Research
Doctoral Dissertation
PSY 7923
Doctoral Dissertation
PSY 7924
Doctoral Dissertation
PSY 7925
Doctoral Dissertation
PSY 7926
Doctoral Dissertation
12
Doctoral Dissertation
PSY 7922
Advancement to Candidacy
Research Internship
PSY 7911
PSY 7921
12
241
48
Qualifying Examination
Students may take the qualifying examination upon successful
completion of a minimum of 18 hours of coursework that includes 9
hours of core courses, 3 to 6 hours of Advanced Seminar Topics, and
up to 3 hours of prescribed electives. The written examination will be
constructed, administered and evaluated by a committee selected from
the doctoral program faculty and approved by the Doctoral Program
Committee. The written portion of the examination will cover the areas of
the programs core courses and other specialized courses taken by the
student, and will include a written grant proposal. The oral examination
will be conducted by the dissertation committee and will be administered
after a student has passed the written examination and before the
student begins dissertation research. If a student does not pass one or
both portions of the qualifying exam, he or she may be given a second
attempt to take the failed portion(s) with permission of the Doctoral
Program Committee. No more than two attempts to pass either portion of
the qualifying exam will be allowed.
Courses
PSY 5113. Professional Ethics and Standards. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: Consent of the instructor or admission to the psychology
program. An examination of the professional standards, ethics, and
theoretical and methodological assumptions governing the conduct
and publication of research in psychology. (Formerly titled Research
Paradigms in Psychology.).
PSY 5213. Research Design. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: Consent of the instructor or admission to the psychology
program. An examination of criteria and procedures for translating
questions of theory and application into effective and relevant research
plans. (Formerly titled Design Considerations in Behavioral Research.).
PSY 5303. Developmental Psychology. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: PSY 5213 or consent of instructor. A critical analysis of the
theories and empirical evidence that form the basis for understanding
developmental processes and age-related change.
242
Department of Psychology
243
244
Department of Psychology
Department of Sociology
The Department of Sociology offers the Master of Science Degree in
Sociology.
245
Degree Requirements
The minimum number of semester credit hours required for the degree,
exclusive of coursework or other study required to remove deficiencies, is
36.
Degree candidates must complete the following requirements:
A. 9 semester credit hours of core courses:
SOC 5003
Sociological Theory
SOC 5063
Research Design
SOC 5073
or SOC 5033
SOC 5043
Evaluation Research
SOC 5053
Professionalization Seminar
SOC 5073
SOC 5083
SOC 5123
SOC 5133
SOC 5143
SOC 5173
SOC 5203
Social Stratification
SOC 5213
SOC 5223
SOC 5233
Sociology of Gender
SOC 5253
Border Studies
SOC 5263
Cultural Studies
SOC 5323
Sociology of Childhood
SOC 5333
SOC 5343
SOC 5353
SOC 5363
SOC 5403
Social Movements
SOC 5423
Social Psychology
SOC 6043
SOC 6063
SOC 6143
Sociology of Religion
SOC 6903
SOC 6973
Special Problems
246
Department of Sociology
36
Courses
SOC 5003. Sociological Theory. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
The nature of sociological theory, the major varieties of theory, the
theorists who developed them, and the social and historical contexts of
theory development and construction. Issues concerning the relation of
theory and research are also explored.
SOC 5033. Qualitative Research Methods. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Qualitative strategies and techniques used in social science
research, including field methods such as participant observation, indepth interviews, and the collection of documents. Emphasis is on
understanding the ways people interpret their experiences and construct
and shape their reality.
SOC 5043. Evaluation Research. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Theory and practice of evaluation of public policy and social service
programs. Evaluation theories, models, and key evaluation studies
are reviewed. Practical and political issues involved in the design and
implementation of evaluations are addressed. Evaluation of a social
agency or program may be included.
SOC 5053. Professionalization Seminar. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
This course assists students in navigating key benchmarks in the
masters program, including the comprehensive examination, masters
thesis, and internship. Issues of pedagogy (teaching), writing, and
scholarship are also addressed, along with prospects students often
consider upon completion of the masters degree (e.g., doctoral program
admission, community college instruction, and the application of
sociological skills in workplace settings).
SOC 5063. Research Design. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: 3 semester credit hours of undergraduate research
methods. Graduate-level methods of sociological inquiry. Topics may
include the ethics of social inquiry, deductive and inductive reasoning,
conceptualization and operationalization, sampling, experimental and
quasi-experimental design, survey research, field research, unobtrusive
research, and basic qualitative and quantitative data analysis.
SOC 5073. Quantitative Research Methods. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: SOC 5063. Graduate-level social statistics. Topics may
include analysis of contingency tables, analysis of variance, correlation,
multiple linear and logistic regressions, and index construction and
scaling with use of computer programs such as SPSS to analyze social
data. (Formerly SOC 5013. Credit cannot be earned for both SOC 5013
and SOC 5073.).
SOC 5123. Family Contexts and Social Change. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Family system organization and process within the broader context of
community and society. Emphasis is on the changing historical roles of
families, as well as cross-cultural, socioeconomic, race and ethnic, and
gender variability in the family. The impact of education, the economy,
and politics is also considered.
SOC 5133. Sociology of Health and Health Care. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
The relation of social behavior to health status, epidemiology, and the
social organization of medicine in the United States and cross-culturally.
Emphasis is on the development of the health care industry and problems
associated with the delivery of health care services.
SOC 5143. Demography and Community Trends. (3-0) 3 Credit
Hours.
Basic demographic perspectives and data; methods of analysis of
population size, distribution, and composition; determinants and
consequences of population trends. Applications of computer programs
for demographic analysis may be included.
SOC 5173. Religion, Health and Mortality. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Explores the complex relationships between religion and mental
health, physical health, and mortality risk. Attention will also be given to
religious influences on factors that may affect health, including health
behaviors, social ties and support systems, psychological resources,
coping practices, and character strengths that may foster resilience. The
distinction between religiousness and spirituality will be discussed.
SOC 5203. Social Stratification. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Theory and research pertaining to structures of social inequalitytheir
causes, forms, and consequences. Emphasis is on the distribution of
power, prestige, and economic privilege, and patterns of social mobility in
the United States.
SOC 5213. Race and Ethnic Relations. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Dominant-subordinate relations between various racial and ethnic groups
from cross-cultural theoretical perspectives. Models of assimilation,
cultural pluralism, and colonialism are investigated, as are their
implications for minority and majority group members.
SOC 5223. Mexican Americans: Community, Culture, and Class.
(3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Sociological focus on the Mexican American population. Emphasis is on
the theories used to interpret the experiences of this group, particularly
those oriented to issues of stratification and social mobility.
SOC 5233. Sociology of Gender. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Interdisciplinary survey of theory and current research on gender
and gender-related issues. Gender-based theories are examined
and compared to explanations for other forms of social stratification.
Implications for family dynamics, the labor force, and the economy are
explored. (Formerly titled Gender and Society.).
SOC 5253. Border Studies. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
An examination of borders in an era of globalization, with emphasis on
the United StatesMexico border. Themes may include a theoretical
criticism of American mainstream border studies and its more important
representatives.
247
248
Department of Sociology
249
Department of Criminal
Justice
CRJ 5323
Mission Statement
CRJ 6103
CRJ 6123
CRJ 6203
Seminar-CRJ:Corrections Policy
CRJ 6213
CRJ 6233
CRJ 6303
CRJ 6343
CRJ 6363
CRJ 6383
Capstone Course
CRJ 6403
CRJ 6951
Independent Study
CRJ 6953
Independent Study
CRJ 6961
Comprehensive Exam
Degree Requirements
The minimum number of semester credit hours required for the degree,
exclusive of other study to remove deficiencies, is 36. Degree candidates
must complete the following three requirements:
A. 15 semester credit hours of core courses:
CRJ 5073
Research Methods
CRJ 5083
Quantitative Analysis
CRJ 5123
CRJ 5133
CRJ 6373
15
15
250
36
251
Courses
CRJ 5073. Research Methods. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: CRJ 3013 or equivalent. Introduction to methodologies used
in justice research. Topics include research design, sampling theory, data
collection, measurement, and analysis.
CRJ 5083. Quantitative Analysis. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: CRJ 5073 or equivalent. Advanced practice in research
design, quantitative techniques, and statistical software used in criminal
justice research. Familiarizes students with conventions for statistical
report writing and data presentation.
CRJ 5123. Justice Policy Form/Implement. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Detailed study of policy formation and implementation process,
stakeholder networks, agenda setting, policy crafting, constituency
building, consideration of alternatives, political decision making and
resolution, short-term and long-term implementation issues, and role of
evaluation and evaluators.
CRJ 5133. Management of Justice Orgs. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
The study of management theory, organizational dynamics, leadership
and administration research related to public and private justice
organizations, case studies and simulations of common administrative
problems, operational policies, and implementation and evaluation.
CRJ 5323. CRJ Program Evaluation. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: CRJ 5083 or equivalent. Introduction to program evaluation
strategies and methods. Surveys implementation, process, and outcome
evaluation research designs and the utilization of both quantitative and
qualitative analytic techniques. Ethical dilemmas and real-world barriers
common to evaluation are examined.
CRJ 6103. Sem:Theory of Crime & Justice. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Consideration of selected topics related to the theory of crime and justice.
Explores particular theories or perspectives of crime and its implications
for justice policy. Topics may focus on traditional or emerging theories
of crime and justice. May be repeated for credit when topics vary, but no
more than 6 hours will apply to the Masters degree.
CRJ 6123. Sem:Topics in Research Methods. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: CRJ 5083 or equivalent. Study of qualitative or quantitative
methods not addressed as part of the regular course offerings. Topics
may include systems analysis in criminal justice, interrupted time-series
analysis, and qualitative methods in criminal justice research. May be
repeated for credit when topics vary, but no more than 6 hours will apply
to the Masters degree.
CRJ 6203. Seminar-CRJ:Corrections Policy. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Consideration of selected topics in the field of corrections. Topics may
include offender classification, case management, pretrial supervision,
management of confinement facilities, juvenile justice, special needs
populations, comparative corrections, offender re-entry, restorative
justice, and criminal sanctions on individuals or corporations. May be
repeated for credit when topics vary, but no more than 6 hours will apply
to the Masters degree.
CRJ 6403. Sem: Topics Law, Society & JPY. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Consideration of selected topics related to law and society issues. Topics
may include decision making by groups or individuals, criminal law and
courts, international law, sentencing reforms, and history of law. May be
repeated for credit when topics vary, but no more than 6 hours will apply
to the Masters degree.
CRJ 6951. Independent Study. (0-0) 1 Credit Hour.
Prerequisites: Graduate standing and permission in writing (form
available) of the instructor and the students Graduate Advisor of Record.
Independent reading, research, discussion, and/or writing under the
direction of a faculty member. For students needing specialized work not
usually available as part of the regular course offerings. May be repeated
for credit, but no more than 6 hours will apply to the Masters degree.
CRJ 6953. Independent Study. (0-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisites: Graduate standing and permission in writing (form
available) of the instructor and the students Graduate Advisor of Record.
Independent reading, research, discussion, and/or writing under the
direction of a faculty member. For students needing specialized work not
usually available as part of the regular course offerings. May be repeated
for credit, but no more than 6 hours will apply to the Masters degree.
CRJ 6961. Comprehensive Exam. (0-0) 1 Credit Hour.
Prerequisite: Approval of the Graduate Advisor of Record to take the
Comprehensive Examination. May be repeated as many times as
approved by the Graduate Advisor of Record. Enrollment is required
each term in which the Comprehensive Examination is taken if no
other courses are being taken that term. The grade report for the
course is either CR (satisfactory performance on the Comprehensive
Examination) or NC (unsatisfactory performance on the Comprehensive
Examination).
CRJ 6983. Justice Policy Research Proj. (0-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: Permission of the Graduate Advisor of Record and Faculty
Advisor. A formal policy research project involving interaction with one or
more justice agencies, conducted by the student under the supervision of
a faculty member. May be repeated for credit, but no more than 6 hours
may be applied to the Masters degree. Credit will be awarded upon
submission and acceptance of the formal research project report.
CRJ 6986. Justice Policy Research Proj. (0-0) 6 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: Permission of the Graduate Advisor of Record and Faculty
Advisor. A formal policy research project involving interaction with one or
more justice agencies, conducted by the student under the supervision of
a faculty member. May be repeated for credit, but no more than 6 hours
may be applied to the Masters degree. Credit will be awarded upon
submission and acceptance of the formal research project report.
CRJ 6991. Master's Thesis. (0-0) 1 Credit Hour.
Prerequisites: Completion of the core courses (15 semester credit hours),
and at least 9 semester credit hours of electives (for a total of 24 hours
of graduate work), and permission of the Graduate Advisor of Record
and Faculty Thesis Advisor. Oral comprehensive examination, thesis
preparation, and defense. May be repeated for credit but no more than
6 hours will apply to the Masters degree. Credit will be awarded upon
successful completion of the thesis.
CRJ 6993. Master's Thesis. (0-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisites: Completion of the core courses (15 semester credit hours),
and at least 9 semester credit hours of electives (for a total of 24 hours
of graduate work), and permission of the Graduate Advisor of Record
and Faculty Thesis Advisor. Oral comprehensive examination, thesis
preparation, and defense. May be repeated for credit but no more than
6 hours will apply to the Masters degree. Credit will be awarded upon
successful completion of the thesis.
252
Department of
Demography
The Department of Demography offers a Doctor of Philosophy degree
in Applied Demography. The focus of the Ph.D. program is on the
application of demographic analysis to policy issues encountered in the
public and private sectors.
Admission Requirements
In addition to satisfying the University-wide requirements for admission
to graduate programs, all prospective students must have a bachelors
degree and a Master of Science or Master of Arts degree from an
accredited university in demography/sociology, geography, economics,
biology, political science, statistics, mathematics, business, or a similar
field. Students who have not earned a qualifying masters degree may be
required to complete the equivalent courses in the appropriate discipline
area before admission to the Ph.D. program in Applied Demography.
In addition, applicants must submit:
1. official transcripts of all undergraduate and graduate coursework
completed,
2. Graduate Record Examination (GRE) scores from a GREadministered examination completed no more than five years prior to
the Ph.D. students date of application. All applicants are required to
submit scores from the GRE math, verbal, and analytical portions of
the examination and scores for a related specialty area,
3. three letters of recommendation from academic or professional
sources familiar with the applicants background, and
4. a letter of application describing the applicants academic and work
backgrounds and goals and objectives related to the applicants
Ph.D. program.
International students from non-English-speaking countries must also
submit a score of at least 550 on the Test of English as a Foreign
253
Degree Requirements
The Applied Demography Ph.D. requires students to complete a
minimum of 42 hours of organized coursework and a minimum of 12
hours of dissertation credits for a total of at least 54 hours beyond the
masters degree. The doctoral program has a base of core courses
that will result in all students having a firm grounding in demography
and related areas of statistics with students then choosing their area of
specialization. All students will be required to complete the core courses
listed below and a set of courses in their chosen area of specialization.
All students are expected to enter the program with some proficiency and
aptitude for utilizing statistical software (i.e., SAS, Stata, R). Basic ability
to use the DEM-Research server to import and transform data sets and
conduct basic statistical analyses is a requirement to be successful with
a number of courses, and skills demonstrated by this ability are important
to being an applied demographer. Recognizing that some students
start the program with computer and software skills and knowledge, an
examination has been developed that will assess this competency.
Program of Study
A. Core Research and Statistics Courses:
1. Required course:
DEM 7243
DEM 7143
DEM 7223
DEM 7263
Spatial Demography
DEM 7273
DEM 7283
DEM 7093
DEM 7113
Mortality
DEM 7083
Fertility
Migration
or
DEM 7053
International Migration
DEM 7073
DEM 7123
12
254
Department of Demography
DEM 7153
DEM 7173
DEM 7183
DEM 7253
DEM 7413
DEM 7423
DEM 7433
DEM 7443
DEM 7783
Doctoral Dissertation
DEM 7913
Doctoral Dissertation
DEM 7916
Doctoral Dissertation
Courses
DEM 7013. Dem Methods Analysis I. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: Consent of instructor. Examines basic materials and
methods used in demography, including methods for measuring levels
and rates of population change, fertility, mortality, migration (both
domestic and international), distribution, and composition. Emphasis
on cohort and period patterns of change, methods of standardization,
and life table methods. (Formerly titled Basic Demographic Methods of
Analysis.).
12
54
Admission to Candidacy
Advancement to candidacy requires that a student complete University
and Applied Demography requirements. The student must choose a
graduate committee and designate one faculty member as chair of that
committee. This faculty member must be a member of the graduate
faculty of UTSA. A degree plan must be submitted by each student to
his or her specific graduate committee and must be approved by the
committee before the end of the second semester of enrollment. The
student may seek candidacy by taking and passing written and oral
qualifying examinations. The written examination is administered by
the graduate faculty. The oral qualifying examination will assess issues
not adequately addressed in the students written examination. The
student will also submit and undergo an oral examination in defense of
the students dissertation proposal. Written qualifying examinations will
be scheduled twice a year. Oral examinations are administered at the
discretion of the students committee and must meet the timeline and
requirements of the University. All students must schedule a defense of
their dissertation at which all members of their committee are present
to examine the student and issue a pass/fail evaluation of the students
work. The Chair of the students committee is responsible for approval of
the final corrections of the students dissertation.
Dissertation
Candidates must demonstrate the ability to conduct independent
research by completing and defending an original dissertation. The
research topic is determined by the student in consultation with his or her
supervising professor. A dissertation committee, selected by the student
in consultation with his or her supervising professor, guides and critiques
the candidates research. The completed dissertation must be formally
presented and defended to, and approved by, the students Dissertation
Committee. Awarding of the degree is based on the approval of the
Dissertation Committee. The UTSA Dean of the Graduate School certifies
the completion of all University-wide requirements.
255
256
Department of Demography
DEM 7423. Dem Labor Force and Markets. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: Consent of instructor. This course introduces students to
the study of demographics characteristics of the labor force and of labor
markets. It addresses such major social and economic trends as the
increased labor force participation of women, the integration of formerly
disenfranchised groups into white-collar occupations, and the emergence
of a service society. Literature that can help explain these trends will
come from gender studies, race and ethnicity, and post-industrialization,
in addition to demographic research. Other topics to be discussed cover
the study of occupational upgrading; employment, unemployment,
and underemployment; regional shifts in employment; the work family
relationship; and the role of social policy regarding work, family, and
fertility.
DEM 7433. Dem of Race and Ethnicity. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: Consent of instructor. This course is designed to introduce
students to the study of the demography of racial and ethnic groups in
the United States with some attention to other parts of the world. Using
theoretical perspectives drawn from the demographic and race and ethnic
literatures, the course will examine demographic, social, and economic
variations among major racial and ethnic groups. The course is divided
into a series of broad topics covering the study of the demography of
racial and ethnic groups including an overview of the construction of
race and ethnicity; theoretical perspectives; the foundations of inequality;
data and methodological issues; the three population processes (fertility,
mortality, and migration); intermarriage and multiracial and pan-ethnic
identities; marriage, family, and household arrangements; and labor
market and socioeconomic outcomes.
DEM 7443. Dem Adolescence & Adulthood. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: Consent of instructor. Demographers have long considered
adolescence and early adulthood as a critical period when significant
life choices are made. Important milestones overlap during these years
as young people leave school, begin work, form romantic relationships,
become independent from parents and begin forming their own families.
This seminar explores the different factors that define the timing and
progression of this transition and explores demographic and policy
implications across different social and cultural contexts. It also highlights
the relevance of the life course for the understanding of demographic
processes.
DEM 7701. Professional Devel Colloquium. (1-0) 1 Credit Hour.
Prerequisite: Consent of instructor. This is a professional development
course focusing on the field of applied demography. Topics will vary
by semester, and may include such things as grant writing, proposal
preparation, peer-reviewed journal publication procedures, presentation
development, demographic data sources and literature, grant funding
sources, and job hunting. Other professional development topics will be
addressed. May be repeated for credit when topics vary.
DEM 7783. Internship in Applied Demo. (0-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisites: Consent of faculty advisor for internships and the Graduate
Advisor of Record. Student must have a minimum of 40 semester credit
hours in the Applied Demography doctoral program. Practical experience
in a workplace setting approved by the faculty advisor for internships
and the GAR in which classroom knowledge of demographic research,
methods, processes, and implications are applied. No more than 3 hours
will apply to the Doctoral degree. A research paper under the supervision
of assigned faculty is required at the end of the internship.
257
Department of Public
Administration
258
PAD 5363
PAD 5393
PAD 6001
PAD 6923
Applied Research II
PAD 5243
PAD 5303
PAD 5313
Mission Statement
PAD 5333
Program Evaluation
PAD 5343
PAD 5443
PAD 5913
Nonprofit Organizations
PAD 5923
PAD 5943
Strat Pln/Mgmt-Public/Non-Prof
PAD 6243
Administrative Law
Degree Requirements
The minimum number of semester credit hours required for the degree,
exclusive of coursework or other study required to remove deficiencies,
is 40. In addition to these basic degree requirements, students without
previous work experience that supports attainment of careers and
leadership roles in public and nonprofit organizations must complete an
additional 6 semester credit hours of PAD 6963 Internship or PAD 6966
Internship.
40
PAD 5023
PAD 5033
Theories-Public Organization
PAD 5233
Applied Research I
PAD 5323
PAD 5033
Theories-Public Organization
PAD 5913
Nonprofit Organizations
PAD 5923
PAD 5933
PAD 5943
Strat Pln/Mgmt-Public/Non-Prof
3
6
259
PAD 5953
PAD 5963
PAD 6973
15
Courses
PAD 5003. Intro to PSL and Mgmt. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
This course introduces students to the discipline of public administration
with an emphasis on the importance of public service ethic for a vibrant
and active civil society. Public service is a vocation and centers on
service to others. Students will be provided an opportunity to develop
the self-awareness and capabilities to be successful and effective public
servants. Topics include a basic introduction to the field and normative
history, and context of public administration and related theories and
a general overview of leadership theories and basic topics in public
administration. Students should take this course in their first 6 hours of
coursework. (Formerly titled Introduction to Public Administration.).
PAD 5023. Research Design & Methods. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Examines data analysis and hypothesis testing. Topics include
descriptive statistics, probability, inference, and multivariate regression
analysis. Provides opportunities to develop proficiency in statistical
software applications. (Formerly titled Quantitative Methods for Public
Administration.).
260
261
PAD 5933. Fiscal Res Dvlpt Nonprofit Org. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
This course provides a practical approach to funding sources and
activities for financing nonprofit organizations. Course material and
activities are designed to promote knowledge about, and practical
application of, fundraising activities that include fundraising planning,
special events, marketing, corporate and foundation funding, direct mail
and annual campaigns, planned giving, capital campaigns, and major
gifts.
Department of Social
Work
Mission Statement
Educating transformative culturally competent social workers.
The Department of Social Work offers the Master of Social Work degree.
262
36-Hour Program
The 36-hour program is designed for applicants who have graduated
with a bachelor's degree in social work (BSW) from a CSWE-accredited
program or have successfully completed a minimum of 18 graduate
semester credit hours in CSWE-accredited Master of Social Work
program. The minimum number of semester credit hours required for
this MSW program track is 36 semester credit hours, course deficiencies
and required UTSA courses for the degree not completed elsewhere, if a
transfer student, may require additional coursework.
36-Hour Program Admission Requirements. In addition to Universitywide requirements and program admission requirements, applicants must
have completed a BSW degree from a CSWE-accredited program within
ten years from the date of application or have successfully completed a
minimum of 18 graduate semester credit hours in a CSWE-accredited
Master of Social Work program. BSW graduates with appropriate
rationale, such as post-BSW practice experience, may apply and request
an exception to the ten-year requirement in their application.
For admission to the 36-hour program, additional requirements include:
a grade point average of at least 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) in the last 60
semester credit hours of coursework for the BSW, as well as any
graduate-level MSW coursework previously completed;
a reference letter from either the BSW field director/coordinator or
BSW program director if a BSW applicant, or from the MSW program
director/chair if an applicant has completed MSW courses, attesting
to good standing status in the CSWE-accredited social work program
where the student has completed coursework;
BSW applicants must provide a copy of the BSW field evaluation
form which indicates number of clock hours completed, final grade,
description of practicum setting (including community and clientele
served), and accomplishments as a practicum student;
MSW applicants who have completed any portion of their foundation
field practicum must provide a copy of the MSW field evaluation
form which indicates number of clock hours completed, final grade,
description of practicum setting (including community and clientele
served), and accomplishments as a practicum student;
be in good standing at the last institution attended; and
be recommended for admission by the UTSA Department of Social
Work Graduate Program Committee.
263
60-Hour Program Admission Requirements. In addition to Universitywide requirements and program admission requirements, applicants must
have completed an undergraduate degree in something other than social
work.
For admission to the 60-hour program, additional requirements include:
1. a cumulative grade point average of at least 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) in
the last 60 semester credit hours of undergraduate and graduatelevel coursework graduate-level coursework previously completed;
SWK 5243
SWK 5473
Multidimensional Assessment
or SWK 5633
3
3
SWK 6953
Independent Study
SWK 6973
Degree Requirements
The minimum number of semester credit hours required for the degree,
exclusive of coursework or other study required to remove deficiencies,
is 36 for the BSW (advanced standing) student, 36 for the modified MSW
degree option for transfer students from CSWE-accredited graduate
social work programs, and 60 for the non-BSW student. Academic course
credit cannot be granted for life or previous work experience.
A. 24 semester credit hours of foundation courses. Non-BSW
students must complete the following courses:
60
Comprehensive Examination
Students who successfully complete SWK 5433 Field Pract IV & Integr
Sem with a grade of B or better satisfy the comprehensive examination
requirement for masters degree graduates. (Students must earn a
minimum grade of B in SWK 5433 as a degree requirement.)
Field Practicum
Students in the 60-semester-credit-hour program are expected to
complete 900 clock hours of field experience under the supervision
of an MSW social worker while in the program. Students complete
a minimum of 450 clock hours over two semesters as part of their
foundation coursework and an additional 450 clock hours over one or
two semesters as part of their advanced coursework. Advanced standing
students complete 450 clock hours of field practicum as part of their
advanced coursework. The programs field office arranges the placement
and oversees the placement process. Although a limited number of
placements are available for students who work full-time, students are
expected to be as flexible as possible to ensure successful placement.
Courses
SWK 5013
SWK 5103
SWK 5113
SWK 5203
SWK 5303
Foundations of SWK I
SWK 5313
Foundations of SWK II
SWK 5403
SWK 5413
Global Context of SW
SWK 5513
SWK 5433
SWK 5443
SWK 5463
SWK 5493
SWK 5523
264
SWK 5403. Field Prac I & Intergr Sem. (2-8) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisites: Graduate standing in social work, completion of SWK
5013, SWK 5103, and SWK 5113, and concurrent enrollment in SWK
5303. This foundation field practicum course is designed to serve as
the integration of professional knowledge, values, and skills in realworld practice. It is a practice course based on supervised assignments
designed to facilitate the students ability to develop and demonstrate
independent learning competencies from a generalist social work
perspective which includes skill in working with individuals, families,
small groups, communities, and organizations. The student completes a
minimum of 225 clock hours at an assigned field practicum site affiliated
with UTSA. The student will continue in this same practicum setting for
SWK 5413. An integrative seminar that emphasizes integration of theory
and practice meets weekly. Students must earn a minimum grade of B
in both the field and the integrative seminar components to pass this
course; the field practicum and the integrative seminar each contribute 50
percent toward the final grade.
265
SWK 5413. Field Prac II & Integr Sem. (2-8) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisites: Graduate standing in social work, completion of SWK 5303
and SWK 5403, and concurrent enrollment in SWK 5313. This foundation
field practicum course builds on knowledge and skills gained in SWK
5403, with a focus on demonstrating competencies from a generalist
social work perspective and skill development with diverse clients/client
systems. The students assignment from SWK 5403 continues at the
same setting. The student completes a minimum of 225 clock hours. An
integrative seminar that emphasizes integration of theory and practice
meets weekly. Students must earn a minimum grade of B in both the
field and the integrative seminar components to pass this course; the field
practicum and the integrative seminar each contribute 50 percent toward
the final grade.
SWK 5423. Field Pract III & Integr Sem. (2-8) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisites: Graduate standing in social work and completion of
all foundation coursework and the majority of advanced courses.
Building on foundation or BSW field experiences, this advanced field
practicum course provides a supervised practicum at an assigned
practicum site and a weekly integrative seminar, with an emphasis
on advanced culturally competent practice with individuals, families,
groups, organizations, and communities. The minimum 225-clockhour internship addresses the continued independent learning and
application of theory to culturally competent practice at an advanced
curriculum level. The internship may be designed as a block with all hours
completed in one semester (450 clock hours) when taken concurrently
with SWK 5433 Advanced Field Practicum IV and Integrative Seminar.
The integrative seminar is designed to integrate classroom theory and
real-world practice. It also serves as the bridge between program goals
and advanced competencies. Students must earn a minimum grade of
B in both the field and the integrative seminar components to pass this
course; the field practicum and the integrative seminar each contribute 50
percent toward the final grade.
SWK 5433. Field Pract IV & Integr Sem. (2-8) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisites: Graduate standing in social work, completion of all
foundation coursework and all advanced courses other than those taken
concurrently with SWK 5433. Taken during the students last semester
in the MSW Program, this course serves as the capstone course for
the social work program. Building on field experiences in SWK 5423,
this course provides a continuation of a supervised practicum at the
same assigned practicum site as in SWK 5423 as well as a weekly
integrative seminar. The minimum 225-clock-hour internship addresses
the continued independent learning and application of theory to culturally
competent practice with individuals, families, groups, organizations,
and communities at an advanced curriculum level. The internship can
be designed as a block of one semester (450 clock hours) when taken
concurrently with SWK 5423 Advanced Field Practicum III and Integrative
Seminar. The integrative seminar is designed to integrate classroom
theory and real world culturally competent practice. It also serves as the
bridge between program goals and advanced competencies. Students
demonstrate program competency mastery through completion of an
independent capstone course paper. Students must earn a minimum
grade of B in both the field and the integrative seminar components to
pass this course; the field practicum and the integrative seminar each
contribute 50 percent toward the final grade.
266
College of Sciences
Department of Biology (p. 268)
Environmental Science (p. 279)
Department of Chemistry (p. 284)
Department of Computer Science (p. 290)
Department of Geological Sciences (p. 296)
Department of Mathematics (p. 301)
Department of Physics and Astronomy (p. 305)
267
Department of Biology
The Department of Biology offers Master of Science degree in Biology,
Biotechnology, and Environmental Science as well as a Doctor of
Philosophy degree in Biology with concentrations in Cell and Molecular
Biology and Neurobiology.
Master of Science Degree in Biology (p. 268)
Master of Science Degree in Biotechnology (p. 270)
Master of Science Degree in Environmental Science (p. 279)
Doctor of Philosophy Degree in Biology (p. 271)
Degree Requirements
Degree-seeking students are required to complete a minimum of 36
semester credit hours that must be approved by the students Graduate
268
Program of Study
I. Thesis Options
A. Emphasis in Cell and Molecular Biology
The emphasis in Cell and Molecular Biology (CMB) is a thesistrack degree program designed to prepare students who may
wish to pursue a Ph.D. in Biology with an emphasis in Cell and
Molecular Biology at UTSA or elsewhere. The Masters level CMB
emphasis provides a prospective student with the coursework and
preliminary research background found in a successful CMB Ph.D.
applicant. Core coursework is directly transferable toward the Ph.D.
degree (if the student is accepted into the Ph.D. program), and
elective coursework is also transferable if it was not used to fulfill
requirements for the M.S. degree.
1. 6 semester credit hours of the following core lecture courses are
required:
BIO 5113
Principles of Biochemistry
BIO 5123
BIO 5133
BIO 7051
Directed Research
or BIO 6953
Independent Study
BIO 6983
Medicinal Plants
BIO 5463
Reproductive Biology
BIO 5543
BIO 5633
BIO 5643
BIO 5653
Biology of Disease
BIO 5663
BIO 5833
BIO 6313
BIO 6513
Drug Development
BIO 6973
Special Problems
12
12
36
269
Department of Biology
Principles of Biochemistry
BIO 5123
BIO 5133
BIO 7051
Directed Research
or BIO 6953
Independent Study
BIO 5643
BIO 5663
BIO 5743
Advanced Virology
BIO 6513
Drug Development
BIO 6543
Vaccine Development
BIO 6573
Microbial Pathogenesis
BIO 6803
BIO 6883
Bacterial Pathogenesis
BIO 6973
Special Problems
12
BIO 5433
Neurophysiology
BIO 5443
Neurochemistry
BIO 7051
BIO 5453
Neuroendocrinology
BIO 5463
Reproductive Biology
BIO 5473
Developmental Neurobiology
BIO 5483
Computational Neuroscience
BIO 5493
Cognitive Neuroscience
BIO 5503
Sensory Physiology
BIO 5533
Human Electrophysiology
BIO 6233
Quantitative Biology
BIO 6313
BIO 6483
Animal Behavior
BIO 6973
Special Problems
12
36
12
BIO 5183
Biology of Learning
BIO 5193
BIO 7041
Medicinal Plants
BIO 5423
Neuroanatomy
BIO 5433
Neurophysiology
BIO 5443
Neurochemistry
BIO 5453
Neuroendocrinology
BIO 5463
Reproductive Biology
BIO 5473
Developmental Neurobiology
BIO 5483
Computational Neuroscience
BIO 5493
Cognitive Neuroscience
BIO 5503
Sensory Physiology
BIO 5533
Human Electrophysiology
BIO 5543
BIO 5633
BIO 5643
BIO 5663
BIO 5743
Advanced Virology
BIO 5833
C. Emphasis in Neurobiology
Neuroanatomy
Independent Study
BIO 6983
BIO 5423
Directed Research
or BIO 6951
36
BIO 5973
12
12
270
BIO 6233
Quantitative Biology
BIO 5543
BIO 6313
BIO 5633
BIO 6483
Animal Behavior
BIO 5643
BIO 6513
Drug Development
BIO 5663
BIO 6543
Vaccine Development
BIO 5743
Advanced Virology
BIO 6573
Microbial Pathogenesis
BIO 5833
BIO 6803
BIO 6233
Quantitative Biology
BIO 6883
Bacterial Pathogenesis
BIO 6313
BIO 6973
Special Problems
12
BIO 6483
Animal Behavior
BIO 6513
Drug Development
BIO 6543
Vaccine Development
C&I 6063
BIO 6573
Microbial Pathogenesis
C&I 6303
BIO 6803
BIO 6883
Bacterial Pathogenesis
C&I 6613
BIO 6973
Special Problems
C&I 6623
C&I 6633
C&I 6733
C&I 6773
Comprehensive Examination
36
B. Open Emphasis
The open emphasis in Biology offers students the opportunity to
acquire a sound preparation of the fundamentals in several areas of
Biology, and to introduce students to recent advances in biological
theory and methods.
1. 3 semester credit hours of the following core lecture courses are
required:
BIO 5173
BIO 5183
Biology of Learning
BIO 7051
Biotechnology Laboratory
BIO 5143
BIO 5163
Biology of Learning
BIO 5233
Medicinal Plants
BIO 5423
Neuroanatomy
BIO 5433
Neurophysiology
BIO 5443
Neurochemistry
BIO 5453
Neuroendocrinology
BIO 5463
Reproductive Biology
BIO 5473
Developmental Neurobiology
BIO 5483
Computational Neuroscience
BIO 5493
Cognitive Neuroscience
BIO 5503
Sensory Physiology
BIO 5533
Human Electrophysiology
36
24
271
Department of Biology
Degree Requirements
Degree-seeking students are required to complete a minimum of 36
semester credit hours that must be approved by the students Graduate
Advisor and Comprehensive Examination Committee, as well as the
Graduate Advisor of Record. Students are expected to meet with their
assigned Graduate Advisor early in the first semester of study to prepare
a course-degree-plan and organize a Committee as early as possible.
Students must work closely with their Advisor and Committee to gain
maximum benefit from this program.
Program of Study
A. Biotechnology lectures core curriculum:
BIO 5001
BIO 5113
Principles of Biochemistry
BIO 5123
BIO 5133
BIO 5762
Biotechnology Laboratory
BIO 5163
BIO 7571
BIO 7572
BIO 7573
BIO 5563
Proteomics
BIO 5663
BIO 5673
BIO 5783
BIO 5971
Directed Research
BIO 5972
Directed Research
BIO 5973
Directed Research
BIO 6323
BIO 6513
Drug Development
6-18
BIO 6543
Vaccine Development
BIO 7563
Practicum in Biotechnology
BIO 7566
Practicum in Biotechnology
BIO 7569
Practicum in Biotechnology
BME 6923
Tissue Engineering
BME 6933
Tissue-Biomaterials Interactions
BME 6943
E. Management of Biotechnology
MOT 5163
Management of Technology
MOT 5173
MOT 5223
MOT 5243
MOT 5313
Emerging Technologies
MOT 5323
Biotechnology Industry
0-12
36
Biotechnology Internship
(Subject to availability.) The internship will require prior arrangement with
biotechnology-based companies and approval of the Graduate Advisor of
Record.
Comprehensive Examination
As specified by University regulations, degree candidates must pass
a comprehensive examination administered by their Comprehensive
Examination Committee. Only tenured or tenure-track faculty members
can chair the Committee, and no more than one member of the
Committee may be nontenure-track faculty or from another institution. For
nonthesis students, this examination must be given in the semester prior
to the semester during which degree requirements are to be completed.
Students who do not achieve the criteria (or necessary expectations) to
pass the exam will be required to enroll in the Critical Thinking & Writing
for the Biological Sciences course (BIO 6963 Critical Thinking & Writing
for the Biological Sciences) in the following semester and retake the
examination.
Admission Requirements
Applicants must have a Bachelor of Arts or a Bachelor of Science degree,
preferably in biology, from an accredited university and a minimum grade
point average of 3.0 in upper-division and graduate work. Applicants
must submit, along with the application, three letters of recommendation,
a Statement of Future Plans, and scores from the Graduate Record
Degree Requirements
The degree requires a minimum of 95 semester credit hours beyond
the baccalaureate degree for the concentration in Neurobiology, and a
minimum of 85 semester credit hours beyond the baccalaureate degree
for the concentration in Cell and Molecular Biology. The curriculum
consists of core courses, elective courses, seminars, required teaching,
research, and completion of the dissertation following advancement to
candidacy. Any grade lower than B in a graduate course or in remedial
coursework at the undergraduate level will not count toward the minimum
number of required hours. Students matriculating with a Masters degree
may use up to 30 semester credit hours toward the degree provided the
courses are comparable to core and elective courses and are approved
by the appropriate Doctoral Studies Committee.
Neuroanatomy
BIO 5433
Neurophysiology
BIO 5443
Neurochemistry
BIO 6233
21
Principles of Biochemistry
BIO 5123
BIO 5133
BIO 7113
BIO 7143
BIO 7413
BIO 7571
& BIO 7572
Quantitative Biology
BIO 7113
BIO 7311
BIO 7413
BIO 7312
Doctoral Dissertation
BIO 7313
Doctoral Dissertation
Doctoral Research
and Doctoral Research
Doctoral Dissertation
BIO 7571
BIO 7572
BIO 7573
Biology Colloquium
BIO 7051
19
1
2
BIO 7212
BIO 7213
BIO 7311
BIO 7312
BIO 7313
43
21
10
Biology Colloquium
BIO 7212
& BIO 7213
45
85
12
272
95
273
Department of Biology
those offered that are broadly related to the field of Microbiology and
Immunology. The overall program of study for this track may differ
by no more than 12 semester credit hours from the program of study
for the regular concentration in Cell and Molecular Biology and must
be approved by the students Dissertation Advisor and the Cell and
Molecular Biology Doctoral Studies Committee.
Advancement to Candidacy
Advancement to candidacy requires a student to complete University
and program requirements and to pass written and oral qualifying
examinations following completion of course requirements. The
examination is administered by the Doctoral Studies Committee of
each concentration and is conducted as outlined in the Handbook of
Academic Policies and Procedures for each concentration. No more than
two attempts to pass qualifying examinations are allowed. Results of
the written and oral examinations must be reported to the appropriate
Doctoral Studies Committee and the Dean of the Graduate School.
Admission into the Doctoral program does not guarantee advancement to
candidacy.
Dissertation
Candidates must demonstrate their ability to conduct independent
research by completing and defending an original dissertation. The
research topic is determined by the student in consultation with their
supervising professor and a Dissertation Committee. The Dissertation
Committee is selected by the student and supervising professor and
Courses
BIO 5001. Ethical Conduct in Research. (1-0) 1 Credit Hour.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing. This course provides a basic overview
of the requirements for ethical conduct within the research laboratory.
The grade report for this course is either CR (satisfactory completion) or
NC (unsatisfactory completion). (Credit cannot be earned for both BIO
5001 and BIO 7413.).
BIO 5033. Biotechnology Laboratory. (0-6) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing. An organized course offering an
introduction to routine procedures employed in the modern research
laboratory.
BIO 5103. River Ecosystems. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing in biology or environmental science,
or consent of instructor. This course examines the physical, chemical,
and biological factors that determine biodiversity and the distribution
of freshwater ecosystems. Key ecological and hydrogeomorphology
concepts and their application to environmental concerns are covered.
Field trip required. (Same as ES 5113. Credit cannot be earned for both
BIO 5103 and ES 5113.).
BIO 5113. Principles of Biochemistry. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisites: BIO 2313 and BIO 3513, or their equivalents. Biochemical
properties of DNA, RNA, carbohydrates, lipids, and proteins. Enzyme
activity. Catabolism. Oxidative and photosynthetic metabolism.
Biosynthesis of macromolecular precursors. Regulation and signaling
mechanisms.
BIO 5123. Principles of Molecular Biology. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: BIO 3513 or an equivalent. Molecular structure and function
of genes and nucleic acids, and the processes of DNA replication,
mutation and repair, as well as transcription and translation of genetic
material. Genome projects, functional genomics and the genetic control
of development will also be covered.
BIO 5133. Principles of Cell Biology. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisites: BIO 3513 and BIO 3813, or their equivalents. Basic
structure, organization and differentiation of cells. Cell cycle, signaling,
growth and movement of cells, as well as cellular immunology and
cellular aspects of infectious disease will also be covered.
274
275
Department of Biology
276
277
Department of Biology
278
Environmental Science
The Environmental Science Academic Programs offer a Master of
Science degree in Environmental Science with two options 1) thesis or 2)
professional (nonthesis).
279
Degree Requirements
12
ES 5013
ES 5023
Environmental Statistics
ES 5503
ES 5981
ES 6941
12
Independent Study
or ES 6951
Independent Study
ES 6983
12
36
280
Environmental Science
Candidates for the Master of Science degree electing the thesis option
must first pass a research proposal examination in front of their Graduate
Committee. The student should schedule the research proposal
examination during the second semester but no later than the third
semester of graduate work. The research proposal examination will be
oral and will cover a written document that includes the thesis topic,
objectives, and research proposed by the student, and will take one to
two hours to complete. The research proposal examination may only
be taken twice. If it is not passed the first time it may be scheduled
again in the following semester. Finally, candidates in the thesis option
must successfully defend their thesis before their Graduate Committee.
The thesis defense will take two to three hours to complete. The thesis
defense is normally scheduled in the last semester before the degree
requirements are to be completed. Part of the thesis defense will be a
public presentation in an open, advertised forum.
Graduate Committee
As specified by University regulations, candidates for the Master of
Science degree must have a Graduate Committee. The Committee
will be chaired by the students Graduate Advisor and will consist of a
minimum of two other members. The Committee should be appointed by
the end of the first semester of the students graduate program. Certain
rules must be adhered to concerning the composition of the Graduate
Committee. Only tenured or tenure-track faculty members can chair these
committees, and no more than one member can be a nontenure/track
faculty member or be from another university.
ES 5503
ES 6103
Environmental Assessment
ES 6723
Courses
ES 5023
Environmental Statistics
24
1
ES 5143
ES 5233
ES 6941
36
281
282
Environmental Science
283
Department of
Chemistry
The Master of Science (M.S.) in Chemistry and the Doctor of Philosophy
(Ph.D.) in Chemistry programs offer opportunities for advanced study and
research designed to prepare students for roles in industry, government,
research institutes, or educational institutions. For the M.S. program, the
thesis option is recommended for students who are planning a career in
research or who contemplate pursuing a doctorate in their program of
study. A nonthesis option is available for students with other goals. The
Ph.D. program is broad-based and will prepare students for a variety of
options in chemistry and related fields upon graduation.
Chemistry includes graduate programs of study in analytical chemistry,
bioorganic chemistry, biophysical chemistry, biochemistry, bioinorganic
chemistry, environmental chemistry, inorganic chemistry, organic
chemistry, and physical chemistry.
Faculty expertise in each of the interest areas offers the opportunity for
direct student-faculty interaction for thesis or dissertation development
through coursework and research. Additional cooperative projects and
programs are available with other area research institutions.
A limited number of teaching and/or research assistantships and
fellowships are available to qualified students. Financial assistance is
awarded on a competitive basis.
Master of Science Degree in Chemistry (p. 1)
Doctor of Philosophy Degree in Chemistry (p. 2)
Admission Requirements
In addition to satisfying the University-wide graduate admission
requirements, applicants must have earned a Bachelor of Arts or a
Bachelor of Science degree from an accredited university with a minimum
grade point average of 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) in upper-division work,
preferably in chemistry. All undergraduate chemistry courses must be
completed with a minimum grade point average of 3.0.
Applicants must submit scores from the Graduate Record Examination
(GRE). When GRE scores are used to determine admission, applicants
will be compared to applicants with similar socioeconomic backgrounds.
A minimum of two letters of recommendation from persons familiar with
the applicants undergraduate scholastic record must be sent to the
Graduate School at the same time application is made for admission to
284
CHE 5313
Advanced Biochemistry
CHE 5453
CHE 5643
CHE 5843
CHE 5981
total of 3 hours)
CHE 6983
Directed Research
CHE 6992
Directed Research
CHE 6993
Directed Research
33
285
Department of Chemistry
CHE 5313
Advanced Biochemistry
CHE 5453
CHE 5643
CHE 5843
CHE 5981
total of 3 hours)
Directed Research
CHE 6992
Directed Research
CHE 6993
Directed Research
CHE 6994
Directed Research
CHE 6995
Directed Research
CHE 6996
Directed Research
33
Admission Requirements
In addition to satisfying the University-wide graduate admission
requirements, applicants must have earned a Bachelor of Arts or a
Bachelor of Science degree from an accredited university and a minimum
grade point average of 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) in upper-division and graduate
work, preferably in chemistry. Applicants must submit scores from the
Graduate Record Examination (GRE) with their application. When GRE
scores are used to determine admission, applicants will be compared to
applicants with similar socioeconomic backgrounds. At least two letters of
Degree Requirements
The Ph.D. degree requires a minimum of 86 semester credit hours
beyond the baccalaureate degree. The curriculum consists of 21
semester credit hours of formal coursework, required teaching, research,
and completion of the dissertation following advancement to candidacy.
Enrollment in the Chemistry Research Colloquium and/or Graduate
Seminar in Chemistry is required each semester of enrollment and may
be taken for a maximum combined total of 12 semester credit hours.
A minimum of 56 semester credit hours in doctoral research, including
12 semester credit hours of doctoral dissertation, must be completed.
The student must have a grade point average of 3.0 or greater (on a
4.0 scale) in the core courses and elective courses combined. Each
student must be a teaching assistant for a minimum of one academic
year. Other requirements include (but are not limited to) submission
of a satisfactory research proposal in an area outside the dissertation
research, the written dissertation, and the final oral examination. The
final oral examination consists of a public presentation of the dissertation
and a closed oral defense which are evaluated by the students Doctoral
Studies Committee. Students matriculating with a Masters degree may
use up to 30 semester credit hours toward the degree, provided the
courses are comparable to core and elective courses.
Program of Study
A. Core curriculum. 9 semester credit hours selected from the
following:
CHE 5263
CHE 5313
Advanced Biochemistry
CHE 5453
CHE 5643
CHE 5843
CHE 7911
12
Directed Research
CHE 6992
Directed Research
CHE 6993
Directed Research
CHE 6994
Directed Research
CHE 6995
Directed Research
CHE 6996
Directed Research
CHE 6997
Directed Research
CHE 6998
Directed Research
2
19
Doctoral Research
CHE 7922
Doctoral Research
CHE 7923
Doctoral Research
CHE 7924
Doctoral Research
CHE 7925
Doctoral Research
CHE 7926
Doctoral Research
CHE 7927
Doctoral Research
CHE 7928
Doctoral Research
Doctoral Dissertation
CHE 7932
Doctoral Dissertation
CHE 7933
Doctoral Dissertation
CHE 7934
Doctoral Dissertation
CHE 7935
Doctoral Dissertation
CHE 7936
Doctoral Dissertation
CHE 7937
Doctoral Dissertation
CHE 7938
Doctoral Dissertation
23
Separation Science
CHE 5833
Computational Chemistry
CHE 6263
CHE 6403
Bioinorganic Chemistry
CHE 6433
Organometallic Chemistry
CHE 6443
CHE 6623
CHE 6633
Bioorganic Chemistry
CHE 6683
CHE 6813
Molecular Thermodynamics
CHE 6823
CHE 6833
Quantum Chemistry
CHE 6853
Biophysical Chemistry
CHE 6883
Mass Spectrometry
CHE 7633
CHE 7973
Special Problems
Courses
CHE 5263. Advanced Analytical Chemistry. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisites: CHE 3214 and CHE 4213, or equivalents. The physical
and chemical principles of modern analytical chemistry with emphasis on
error analysis, signals and noise, electrochemical techniques, analytical
separations, and selected spectroscopic methods based on absorption
and emission.
12
286
86
Advancement to Candidacy
All students seeking a doctoral degree at UTSA must be admitted
to candidacy. One of the requirements for admission to candidacy is
passing the Qualifying Examination. The Qualifying Examination is
divided into written and oral portions. A Dissertation Research Proposal
(DRP) constitutes the written portion, and defense of the DRP constitutes
the oral portion. The oral portion must be presented no later than
one month following submission of the written portion. The students
performance on both the written and oral portions is evaluated by the
students Doctoral Studies Committee.
287
Department of Chemistry
CHE 5922. Research and Teaching Practice and Ethics. (0-0) 2 Credit
Hours.
Prerequisites: Graduate standing in Chemistry and concurrent
designation as a teaching assistant in the Chemistry program or consent
of instructor. The course is designed to improve the instructional
effectiveness of graduate students teaching at the college level. The
course will cover, but is not limited to, board-work, clear speech,
teacher-student interaction, professional responsibilities, course content
and pace, grading policy, quiz writing, sensitivity training to student
needs, information on technical support, and guest lecturers on special
topics. Research ethics will be discussed based on case studies. The
grade report for the course is either CR (satisfactory performance) or
NC (unsatisfactory performance). (Formerly CHE 5923. Credit cannot
be earned for both CHE 5922 and CHE 5923.).
CHE 5981. Graduate Seminar in Chemistry. (0-3) 1 Credit Hour.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Chemistry or consent of the Graduate
Advisor of Record. Current research and literature seminars presented
by faculty, visiting lecturers, and doctoral candidates. Students in the
Doctoral chemistry program must register every semester while in
residence, but only 8 hours will apply toward the Doctoral degree. The
grade report for the course is either CR (satisfactory performance) or
NC (unsatisfactory performance).
CHE 6263. Recent Advances in Bioanalytical Chemistry. (3-0) 3
Credit Hours.
Prerequisites: Consent of instructor and Graduate Advisor of Record.
A survey of modern analytical techniques used in studies of biological
interest from both theoretical and practical perspectives. (Formerly CHE
7263. Credit cannot be earned for both CHE 6263 and CHE 7263.).
CHE 6403. Bioinorganic Chemistry. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: CHE 4303 or CHE 4463, or equivalent. Study of the
functions, reaction sites, mechanisms, molecular architecture, and
medicinal aspects of metal ions in biological systems including bioorganometallic compounds. A discussion of the experimental techniques
will be included. (Formerly CHE 7403. Credit cannot be earned for both
CHE 6403 and CHE 7403.).
CHE 6433. Organometallic Chemistry. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: CHE 4463 or equivalent. This course is intended to provide
students with an introduction to the field of organometallic chemistry
covering concepts in bonding, synthesis, and catalysis. Students will
become familiar with common ligands and preparative methods in
organometallic chemistry, theories of bonding and electronic structure,
basic reaction mechanisms, and applications to catalysis in organic
chemistry. (Formerly CHE 7433. Credit cannot be earned for both CHE
6433 and CHE 7433.).
CHE 6443. Green Chemistry and Catalysis. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: CHE 3464 or consent of instructor. Introduction to the 12
principles of green chemistry as well as the tools of green chemistry
including the use of alternative feed stocks or starting materials,
reagents, solvents, target molecules, and catalysts; demonstrates how
to evaluate a reaction or process and determine greener alternatives;
focuses on the application of innovative technology the development of
greener routes to improve industrial processes and to produce important
products.
288
289
Department of Chemistry
Department of Computer
Science
The Department of Computer Science offers a Master of Science degree
and a Doctor of Philosophy degree in Computer Science.
Master of Science Degree in Computer Science (p. 290)
Doctor of Philosophy Degree in Computer Science (p. 290)
12
Computer Architecture
Operating Systems
CS 5633
Analysis of Algorithms
B. Electives:
18
3
6
CS 6353
CS 6373
Applied Cryptography
CS 6393
Software Engineering
3
6
CS 5153
CS 5343
CS 6133
Program of Study
CS 5523
Degree Requirements
CS 5513
36
CS 5343
Admission Requirements
CS 5363
The regulations for this degree comply with the general University
regulations (refer to Chapter 2, General Academic Regulations, and
Chapter 4, Masters Degree Regulations).
A. Core courses:
CS 5323
290
Admission Requirements
6
291
Degree Requirements
Candidates for the degree are required to successfully complete a
minimum of 90 semester credit hours of graduate coursework as
described in the program of study.
12
CS 5363
CS 5513
Computer Architecture
CS 5523
Operating Systems
CS 5633
Analysis of Algorithms
B. Electives:
CS 7123
18
42
Doctoral Research
CS 7212
Doctoral Research
CS 7213
Doctoral Research
CS 7214
Doctoral Research
CS 7215
Doctoral Research
CS 7216
Doctoral Research
Doctoral Dissertation
CS 7312
Doctoral Dissertation
CS 7313
Doctoral Dissertation
CS 7314
Doctoral Dissertation
CS 7315
Doctoral Dissertation
CS 7316
Doctoral Dissertation
D. Flexible Electives:
After a student has passed the qualifying examination and has made
progress in doctoral research, the next step is the Doctoral Dissertation
Proposal. The student has to form a Dissertation Committee chaired
by the students doctoral advisor and prepare a written proposal for
a dissertation topic. The Dissertation Committee will conduct an oral
examination during which the student presents the dissertation proposal.
The presentation is followed by a period of questioning based on the
dissertation proposal. Unanimous approval of the Dissertation Committee
is required to pass the oral examination. No more than two attempts to
pass the oral examination will be permitted. After a student has passed
the Doctoral Dissertation Proposal Examination, the student must register
for CS 7311-CS 7316 Doctoral Dissertation every semester until the
student completes the degree.
Advancement to Candidacy
Qualifying Examination
Program of Study
A. Core courses:
Transfer of Credit
90
Courses
CS 5103. Software Engineering. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: CS 4773 or software development experience. Introduction
to methods and tools for the requirements analysis and design stages
of software life cycles. Discussion of software requirements including
elicitation, modeling notations, analysis, and documentation. Brief
overview of process models and project management. Examination of
major architectural styles in existing software systems, design methods,
design patterns, and reverse engineering. Course will include design
experience using CASE tools.
CS 5113. Computer Graphics. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisites: CS 3343 and MAT 2233. The course covers interactive 3D computer graphics, polygonal representations of 3-D objects, boolean
operations, interactive lighting models, interactive texture mapping,
shadow generation as well as image-based techniques such as stencils,
hidden-line removal, silhouette edges, rendering and global illumination.
CS 5123. Software Testing and Quality Assurance. (3-0) 3 Credit
Hours.
Prerequisite: CS 4773 or software development experience. Introduction
of testing techniques for software systems: unit testing, integration
testing, system testing, acceptance testing, and regression testing; test
plan and test case design; quality assurance; verification and validation.
CS 5153. User Interfaces and Usability. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: CS 4773 or software development experience. This course
focuses on the development of high-quality user interfaces. The course
reviews the basics of user interface development, tools, and use-case
driven design techniques; examines the elements of good design and
usability, metrics for usability, and procedures for user testing.
CS 5233. Artificial Intelligence. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: CS 3343. This course covers the construction of programs
that use knowledge representation and reasoning to solve problems.
Major topics include informed search, logical and probabilistic inference,
machine learning, planning, and natural language processing.
CS 5253. Expert Systems. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: CS 5233. This course presents an in-depth study of the
area of artificial intelligence known as expert systems. Example expert
systems are examined as a means of identifying the generally accepted
methodologies for developing such systems as well as the basic research
issues involved.
CS 5263. Bioinformatics. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Computer Science or consent
of instructor. Introduction to bioinformatics. Problem areas such as
sequence analysis and gene component analysis, structure prediction,
gene ontology, phylogenetic inference, gene regulation, and pathway
construction and analysis will be approached from a computational
viewpoint. (Same as BME 6323. Credit cannot be earned for both BME
6323 and CS 5263.).
CS 5323. Principles of Computer and Information Security. (3-0) 3
Credit Hours.
Prerequisites: CS 3733 and CS 3873. An introduction to the protection of
computer systems and networks. Topics include authentication, access
controls, malicious logic, formal security methods, assurance and trust
in computer systems and networks, firewalls, auditing and intrusion
detection, cryptography and information hiding, risk management,
computer forensics, and ethics.
292
293
294
295
Department of
Geological Sciences
The Department of Geological Sciences offers a Master of Science
degree in Geology and a Certificate of Professional Development in
Geographic Information Science. Department faculty also participate
in the Ph.D. program in Environmental Science and Engineering
administered by the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering.
296
the supervising committee must be followed. Only tenured or tenuretrack faculty members can chair these committees, and no more than one
member can be a nontenure-track faculty member or be from another
institution.
Comprehensive Examination
Graduate Committee
As specified by University regulations, candidates for the Master of
Science degree must have a Graduate Committee. The Committee
will be chaired by the students academic advisor and will consist of a
minimum of two other members. Each student must decide if they are
going to complete the thesis or nonthesis option in the first year if not
done so in the first semester because that will determine the type of
committee appointed. The Committee should be appointed once an
academic advisor and topic have been determined. University rules for
Degree Requirements
The Master of Science degree in Geology requires the successful
completion of a minimum of 33 semester credit hours (exclusive of
coursework or other study required to remove academic or admission
deficiencies).
GEO 5991
33
297
Degree Requirements
GEO 5973
Directed Research
GEO 5991
GEO 6953
Independent Study
11
Remote Sensing
GEO 6513
Advanced GIS
GEO 6533
ANT 6653
CE 5293
DEM 7093
GEO 5033
GRG 5913
Certificate Curriculum
C. Comprehensive Examination:
GEO 6961
3
15
Courses
39
298
299
300
Department of
Mathematics
MAT 5293
Degree Requirements
Degree candidates are required to successfully complete 36 semester
credit hours and meet University-wide degree requirements. Students
admitted to the program must consult the Graduate Advisor of Record for
their individual study plans and get approval before enrollment in each
course.
Candidates for the degree must complete:
A. 6 semester credit hours of required courses:
AIM 5113
MAT 5283
MAT 5223
18
MAT 5323
Mathematical Modeling
MAT 5603
Numerical Analysis
MAT 5613
MAT 5653
Differential Equations I
MAT 5673
MAT 5973
Directed Research
MAT 5983
MAT 6603
AIM 6943
301
MGT 5043
MGT 5093
Leadership
36
302
Department of Mathematics
Degree Requirements
Degree candidates are required to successfully complete 36 semester
credit hours in one of two concentrations, (1) Mathematics or (2) Applied
Mathematics.
A. Students must complete the following 9 hours of required
coursework:
MAT 5203
MAT 5223
MAT 5243
General Topology I
Mathematics Concentration
MAT 5173
MAT 5403
Functional Analysis I
MAT 5603
Numerical Analysis
MAT 5653
Differential Equations I
18
36
Degree Requirements
MAT 5023
Problem-Solving Seminar
MAT 5033
MAT 5043
MAT 5103
MAT 5283
36
Algebra I
MAT 5283
15
303
304
Department of Mathematics
Department of Physics
and Astronomy
The Master of Science (M.S.) in Physics and the Doctor of Philosophy
(Ph.D.) in Physics programs offer opportunities for advanced study and
research designed to prepare students for roles in industry, government,
research institutions, or educational institutions.
Graduate students will be able to choose from several areas of
specialization in experimental and theoretical physics, including
condensed matter, advanced materials, nanomaterials, biophysics, laser
spectroscopy, astrophysics, theoretical particle physics, cosmology,
mathematical physics, and computational physics. The graduate
program includes a partnership with the Space Science and Engineering
Division of the Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) which, through the
appointment of selected Adjoint Faculty, provides research opportunities
in Space Physics, including space weather, ionospheric-thermosphericmesospheric physics, plasmaspheric physics, magnetospheric physics,
heliospheric physics, cometary and planetary science, space physics
instrumentation, and computational space physics.
A limited number of teaching and/or research assistantships and
fellowships are available to qualified students. Financial assistance is
limited and is awarded on a competitive basis.
Master of Science Degree in Physics (p. 1)
Doctor of Philosophy Degree in Physics (p. 2)
Admission Requirements
Students must satisfy the University-wide graduate admission
requirements. Applicants must have a Bachelor of Arts or a Bachelor of
Science degree from an accredited university and a minimum grade point
average of 3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) in their last 60 credit hours of coursework,
preferably in physics. Applicants with fewer than 12 credit hours of upperdivision undergraduate physics coursework may be admitted as Special
Graduate students under the condition that they complete 12 hours of
upper-division undergraduate physics coursework before admission as
Masters students.
Applicants must submit scores from the general Graduate Record
Examination (GRE). A minimum of two letters of recommendation from
persons familiar with the applicants undergraduate scholastic record
must be sent to the Graduate School at the same time application is
305
Classical Mechanics I
PHY 5203
Electrodynamics I
PHY 5303
Statistical Mechanics
PHY 5403
Quantum Mechanics I
PHY 6983
24
PHY 7013
Research Seminar
Students must attend the Research Seminar for three (3) full
semesters during their graduate studies. However, no more than 3
semester credit hours may be applied to the M.S. degree.
B. 6 semester credit hours of advanced electives, including
graduate courses offered by other departments, as approved by the
Graduate Advisor of Record and by the comprehensive examination
committee, or up to 6 hours of credit of undergraduate courses if the
courses are appropriate for the students program of study, if they
were not taken as an undergraduate, and if they are approved by the
Graduate Advisor of Record
30
Classical Mechanics I
PHY 5203
Electrodynamics I
PHY 5303
Statistical Mechanics
21
306
PHY 5403
Quantum Mechanics I
PHY 7003
PHY 7013
Research Seminar
Students must attend the Research Seminar for three (3) full
semesters during their graduate studies. However, no more than 3
semester credit hours may be applied to the M.S. degree.
B. 9 semester credit hours of advanced electives including
graduate courses offered by other departments, as approved by the
Graduate Advisor of Record and by the comprehensive examination
committee, or up to 6 credit hours of advanced undergraduate
courses if appropriate for their program of study, if not taken as an
undergraduate, and if approved by the Graduate Advisor of Record.
Transfer of Credit
Program of Study
A. Core Curriculum:
The regulations for this degree comply with the general University
regulations (refer to Chapter 2, General Academic Regulations, and
Chapter 5, Doctoral Degree Regulations).
PHY 5103
Classical Mechanics I
PHY 5203
Electrodynamics I
PHY 5303
Statistical Mechanics
PHY 5403
Quantum Mechanics I
Classical Mechanics II
Admission Requirements
PHY 6123
PHY 6203
Electrodynamics II
PHY 6303
Quantum Mechanics II
PHY 6313
Applicants whose native language is not English must submit scores from
the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International
English Language Testing System (IELTS). The English Language
Assessment Procedure is a mandatory assessment for incoming
international students whose TOEFL scores are between 550 and 600
(paper version) or 79 and 100 (Internet version) or an IELTS score below
7. See Chapter 1, Admission, of this catalog for details.
Degree Requirements
The doctoral degree requires a minimum of 81 semester credit hours
beyond the baccalaureate degree. The coursework in the Program
of Study includes a Core Curriculum (12 semester credit hours) and
PHY 6323
PHY 6403
PHY 6413
Fundamentals of Astronomy
PHY 6503
Mathematical Physics I
PHY 6513
Mathematical Physics II
PHY 6523
Computational Physics
PHY 6613
PHY 6623
12
21
Topics courses may be repeated for credit as the topics vary. The
student should consult her/his Graduate Advisor if in doubt.
PHY 7403
PHY 7503
PHY 7603
PHY 7703
PHY 7803
PHY 7903
Topics in Astrophysics
PHY 7973
48
PHY 7013
Research Seminar
Directed Research
PHY 7002
Directed Research
PHY 7003
Directed Research
Courses
Doctoral Research
PHY 7102
Doctoral Research
PHY 7103
Doctoral Research
Doctoral Dissertation
PHY 7112
Doctoral Dissertation
PHY 7113
Doctoral Dissertation
307
81
Advancement to Candidacy
All students seeking a doctoral degree at UTSA must be admitted
to candidacy. One of the requirements for admission to candidacy is
successfully completing the Doctoral Qualifying Examination. Students
should consult the Universitys Doctoral Degree Regulations (Chapter 5
of this catalog) for the other requirements.
Qualifying Examination
The qualifying examination is divided into written and oral portions.
The details of the written portion of the examination can be found in
the handout for Ph.D. students. The oral portion covers the students
proposed research program and related fundamentals, must be taken
within one year after passing the written portion of the qualifying
examination, and will be evaluated by the students Qualifying
Examination Committee. Additional details are described in the
Departments Graduate Student Handbook.
308
309
310
Admission Requirements
The TS Ph.D. is an advanced scientific research doctoral program.
In addition to satisfying the University-wide graduate admission
requirements (refer to Chapter 1, Admission), the following admission
requirements will be applied to all applicants:
1. Completion of, or enrollment in, an advanced Professional Degree
(e.g., M.D., D.O., D.D.S., MSN, Pharm.D.), completion of a Masters
or Doctoral degree, preferably in a health-related, science, public
health or social science discipline, or enrollment as a M.D./Ph.D.
student with successful completion of the two-year pre-clinical
curriculum. Enrollment/graduation must be from an accredited college
or university in the United States, or proof of equivalent training at a
foreign institution, with a minimum grade point average of 3.0 in the
professional and/or graduate work
2. Official Graduate Record Examination (GRE) scores. Applicants may
request a waiver for the GRE requirement if they provide evidence
that they have earned a doctoral degree (i.e., M.D., D.O., J.D.,
D.V.M., Pharm.D., D.D.S., Ph.D., etc.) from an accredited U.S.
institution, are currently certified by the Educational Commission for
Foreign Medical Graduates (ECFMG), have passed all three steps of
the United States Medical Licensing Examination (USMLE), or were
previously enrolled in the Graduate School of one of the joint degree
institutions
3. Official Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score,
with a score of at least 600 (paper test) or online equivalent, or
a score of 7.0 on the Academic Examination of the International
English Language Testing System (IELTS), for applicants whose
native language is not English. Applicants whose scores fall below
the minimum requirement will be further assessed for English
comprehension skills. TOEFL may be waived for applicants whose
post-secondary education was conducted with English as the
language of instruction. ECFMG certified physicians will also be
granted a TOEFL waiver. NOTE: Consistent with Texas Education
311
Degree Requirements
The degree requires a minimum of 72 semester credit hours beyond
the masters or professional degree. Students will elect either T1 Track
(bench-to-bedside) or T2 Track (bedside-to-community). The curriculum
consists of core courses (24 semester credit hours), track elective
courses (12 semester credit hours) and free elective courses (6 semester
credit hours), plus 30 semester credit hours of research and completion
of a dissertation. Students will work with a graduate advisor or the
supervising professor to complete an individualized degree plan that will
meet the students research interest and goals. Using the individualized
degree plan as a guide, courses may be taken at any participating
312
Advancement to Candidacy
TS Ph.D. students will advance to candidacy after completing their written
and oral qualifying examinations. The Qualifying Examination will be
administered before the start of dissertation research, and admission to
candidacy will be contingent on its successful completion. Methods for
administration of the qualifying exam will be written and oral. The exam
will be comprehensive and will include questions covering:
Information gained through the translational science coursework; and
The basic knowledge required for the chosen area of research.
The format of the exam and composition of the Qualifying Examination
Committee (QEC) will be determined by the TS COGS. Additional
criteria may be set by the home institution, such as approval by an
institution-specific committee, such as a Graduate Studies Committee
(GSC), in addition to the TS COGS. At a minimum, each QEC will have
representatives from two UT institutions and at least one graduate faculty
member from a discipline outside the students main area of study. The
QEC will administer the qualifying exam at a set date and time, will utilize
the results as the basis for evaluating the students performance, and
will report its judgment of performance to the TS COGS and the home
institutions committee, if applicable.
The qualifying exam is composed of two parts:
1. Written Exam: The written exam is a series of assignments designed
to test the students background in translational science and their
ability to apply this knowledge to research. Students will have up to
three months to complete the written portion of the qualifying exam.
Requirements for the written exam will include:
a. Preparation of a 12-page research grant proposal related to their
field but not their specific dissertation project
Dissertation
Candidates must demonstrate their ability to conduct independent
research by completing and defending an original dissertation. The
research topic is determined by the student in consultation with the
supervising professor and the Dissertation Committee. A student must
choose a Dissertation Committee by the end of the second semester of
study or within 90 days following the students admission to candidacy.
The Dissertation Committee will include at least four members, but
may have additional members if required by the Graduate School
of the students home institution. Minimum Dissertation Committee
requirements are:
1. The Supervising Professor, who will act as the Chair;
2. Graduate faculty from the TS Ph.D. program from the students home
institution;
3. Graduate faculty from the TS Ph.D. program from a second institution
participating in the joint degree program;
4. A member from an outside institution who is not part of the TS Ph.D.
program and is an expert in the students dissertation field.
Approval of the Dissertation Committee and the completed dissertation
will follow the guidelines established by the Graduate School of the
students home institution.
2. Oral Exam: The oral exam will consist of presentation of the 12page research grant proposal (see above) including the background,
significance, innovation, impact, methods/approach, proposed
analyses, and anticipated problems. The QEC, through questioning,
will engage the candidate in a discussion of the proposed research to
delineate the strengths and weaknesses of the approach.
Students who do not pass the qualifying exam will have their
performance reviewed by the QEC. If the qualifying exam is not passed,
the QEC may recommend:
1. specific remediation in areas that require further study, including
taking further coursework;
2. the student be allowed to retake the qualifying exam or section(s) of
the exam, as appropriate; and/or
home institution. The TS COGS will also inform the Graduate Schools of
the other UT components.
313
UTHSCSA
UTHSCSA
UTHSCSA
UTHSCSA
UTHSCSA
UTHSCSA
UTSA
UTSA
UTSA
UTSA
UTSA
UTSA
UTSPH
PH 1610 Introduction to
Biostatistics
UTSPH
PH 1690 Foundations of
Biostatistics
UTSPH
UTSPH
UTSPH
Program of Study
The TS Ph.D. curriculum is designed to meet requirements and display
expertise in eight educational domains:
1. Understanding translational science
2. Responsible research conduct
3. Research design and analysis
4. Lead, motivate, and manage collaborative team science
5. Utilization of multi-level cultural proficiency
A. Core Courses
A minimum of 24 semester credit hours must be taken in courses
with content specific to the eight educational domains for the TS
Ph.D. program. For some domains, only one course is available. For
others, equivalent courses are offered on multiple campusesUTSA,
UTHSCSA, UTCOP (UT Austin College of Pharmacy), and UTSPH (UT
School of Public Health San Antonio Regional Campus). The TS COGS
will evaluate each universitys curriculum annually and may approve
courses not included on this list. The courses selected to meet the
core course requirements must be approved by the academic advisor/
supervising professor prior to enrollment. Core courses may be selected
from:
UT Austin
UTHSCSA
UTSA
UTSPH
UTSPH
UTSA
UT Austin
UTSA
UT Austin
UTSPH
UT Austin
UTSPH
UT Austin
UT Austin
314
UT Austin
UT Austin
UTHSCSA
UTSA
UTHSCSA
UTSPH
UTSPH
C. Electives
A minimum of 18 semester credit hours is required (12 hours in the
selected track and 6 hours of free electives). These can be selected
from many graduate-level courses offered at any of the four participating
institutions. The courses selected should contribute to the students
research and career needs and must be approved as part of the students
individualized degree plan by the academic advisor/supervising professor
prior to enrollment.
Graduate Faculty
Roff, Shelley
Associate
Professor
315
Name
Title
Education
Alexander, John
Associate
Professor
Valentine, Maggie
Professor
Azari, Rahman
Assistant
Professor
Walter, Rebecca J.
Assistant
Professor
Baron, Robert M.
Professor
Beeson, Saadet
Assistant
Professor
Associate
Professor
Associate
Professor
Architecture
Construction Science
Du, Eric Jing
Assistant
Professor
Gunhan, Suat
Associate
Professor
Hatipkarasulu,
Yilmaz
Associate
Professor
Liu, Rui
Assistant
Professor
Palomera-Arias,
Rogelio
Assistant
Professor
Assistant
Professor
College of Business
Doganer, Sedef
Assistant
Professor
Dupont, William
Professor
Gribou, Julius M.
Professor
Lombardi, Angela
Assistant
Professor
Burian, Edward R.
Caine, Ian
Education
B.B.A., Texas A&I University; J.D.,
Texas Southern School of Law;
M.A., Notre Dame University; LL.M.,
Harvard Law School
Accounting
Professor
Boone, Jeff
Professor
Cole, Cathy J.
Assistant
Professor
Fasci, Martha A.
Associate
Professor
Forgione, Dana A.
Professor
Groff, James E.
Professor
Nishimoto, Taeg
Professor
Petrov, Antonio
Assistant
Professor
Associate
Professor
Title
Asthana, Sharad C.
Rashed-Ali, Hazem
Name
316
Graduate Faculty
Liu, Long
Associate
Professor
Liu, Hu (Harrison)
Assistant
Professor
Lo, Melody
Associate
Professor
Lopez-Acevedo,
Dennis M.
Associate
Professor
Mahdavi, Saeid
Associate
Professor
Merrifield, John D.
Professor
Mao, Juan
Assistant
Professor
Nwaeze, Emeka T.
Associate
Professor
Truett, Dale B.
Professor
Pitman, Marshall K.
Professor
Truett, Lila J.
Professor
Weiher, Kenneth E.
Associate
Professor
Bayar, Onur
Associate
Professor
Beyhaghi, Mehdi
Assistant
Professor
Bhanot, Karan
Professor
Burns, Natasha
Associate
Professor
Ciochetti, Brian
(Tony)
Professor
Raman,
Krishnamurthy
Professor
Sanders, Elaine
Associate
Professor
Smith, Pamela C.
Professor
Welch, Sandra T.
Professor
Ye, Zhongxia
(Shelly)
Assistant
Professor
Yin, Jennifer
Associate
Professor
Alva, Samson J.
Assistant
Professor
Beladi, Hamid
Professor
de la Via, Lynda
Professor
Firoozi, Fathali
Professor
Hollas, Daniel R.
Professor
Lien, Donald
Professor
Economics
Finance
Misra, Lalatendu
Professor
Thomson, Thomas
A.
Professor
Wald, John K.
Professor
Wang, Zijun
Associate
Professor
317
Krasikova, Dina
Assistant
Professor
Le, Huy
Associate
Professor
Lengel, Robert H.
Associate
Professor
Lengnick-Hall,
Cynthia
Professor
Dietrich, Glenn B.
Professor
McCarter, Matthew
Grant, Kevin P.
Associate
Professor
Assistant
Professor
Hallam, Cory R. A.
Associate
Professor
McDonald, Michael
L.
Associate
Professor
Miller, Stewart R.
Professor
Ko, Myung S.
Associate
Professor
Mitchell, William G.
Associate
Professor
Liu, Zhechao
Associate
Professor
Rudy, Bruce C.
Assistant
Professor
Rao, V. Srinivasan
Professor
Wang, Dana
Assistant
Professor
Spivey, Woodie A.
Associate
Professor
DeOliveira, Victor
Associate
Professor
Walz, Diane B.
Professor
Gonzalez, Juan J.
Associate
Professor
Warren, John
Associate
Professor
Han, Donghoon
Assistant
Professor
Keating, Jerome P.
Professor
Professor
Ko, Daijin
Professor
Leung, Mark T.
Associate
Professor
Roy, Anuradha
Associate
Professor
Sass, Daniel A.
Associate
Professor
Au, Yoris A.
Beebe, Nicole
Associate
Professor
Associate
Professor
Management
Cardy, Robert L.
Chang, Pepe
Associate
Professor
Heller, Victor L.
Associate
Professor
Khanna, Poonam
Assistant
Professor
318
Graduate Faculty
Sun, Minghe
Professor
Tripathi, Ram C.
Professor
Tullous, Raydel
Associate
Professor
Xu, Kefeng
Associate
Professor
Ye, Keying
Professor
Marketing
Basuroy, Suman
Professor
Bojanic, David C.
Professor
Chandrasekaran,
Deepa
Assistant
Professor
Lee, Saerom
Assistant
Professor
Silvera, David H.
Professor
Utecht, Richard L.
Associate
Professor
Yan, Dengfeng
Assistant
Professor
Zhang, Yinlong
(Allen)
Professor
Title
Education
Clark, Ellen R.
Professor
Emeritus
Colfer, George R.
Professor
Emeritus
Cook, Gillian E.
Professor
Emeritus
Davis, Dewey D.
Professor
Emeritus
Kessler, Carolyn L.
Professor
Emeritus
Milk, Robert D.
Professor
Emeritus
Prez, Bertha
Professor
Emeritus
Sutherland, Berry
Professor
Emeritus
Winter, Suzanne
Associate
Professor
Emeritus
Wortham, Sue C.
Professor
Emeritus
Bicultural-Bilingual Studies
Cervantes, Marco
Assistant
Professor
Ek, Lucila D.
Associate
Professor
Flores, Belinda B.
Professor
Huang, Becky
Assistant
Professor
Langman, Juliet
Professor
Lindahl, Kristen
Assistant
Professor
Machado-Casas,
Margarita
Associate
Professor
Miranda, Marie
Associate
Professor
Mndez-Negrete,
Josephine
Associate
Professor
Prieto, Linda
Assistant
Professor
Assistant
Professor
Associate
Professor
Smith, Howard L.
Associate
Professor
Sols, Jorge
Assistant
Professor
Snchez, Patricia
Associate
Professor
Tafolla, Carmen
Trujillo, Armando L.
Saldaa, Lilliana
Sayer, Peter
Assistant
Professor
Duffey, Thelma
Professor
Haberstroh, Shane
Associate
Professor
Juhnke, Gerald A.
Professor
Lloyd-Hazlett,
Jessica
Assistant
Professor
Moyer, Michael
Associate
Professor
Pow, Allison
Assistant
Professor
Robertson, Derek
Assistant
Professor
Trepal, Heather C.
Associate
Professor
Zapata, Jesse T.
Professor
Barnett, Bruce G.
Professor
Brewer, Curtis A.
Assistant
Professor
Briscoe, Felecia
Associate
Professor
Crisp, Gloria E.
Associate
Professor
Associate
Professor in
Practice
DeLeon, Abraham
Associate
Professor
Associate
Professor
Dizinno, Gerry
Associate
Professor
Garza, Jr.,
Encarnacon
Associate
Professor
Giles, Mark
Associate
Professor
Counseling
Avent, Jane
319
Assistant
Professor
320
Graduate Faculty
Merchant, Betty M.
Professor
Schutz, Paul A.
Professor
Styck, Kara M.
Assistant
Professor
Nio, Juan M.
Assistant
Professor
Sullivan, Jeremy R.
Associate
Professor
Nora, Amaury
Professor
Villarreal, Victor
Assistant
Professor
Nuez, Anne-Marie
Associate
Professor
Alanis-York, Iliana
Associate
Professor
Okilwa , Nathern
Assistant
Professor
Arreguin-Anderson,
Maria
Associate
Professor
Oliva, Maricela
Associate
Professor
Rendn, Laura
Professor
Berry, Theodorea
Regina
Associate
Professor
Rodrguez, Mariela
A.
Associate
Professor
Bilica, Kimberly
Associate
Professor
Bonner, Emily
Associate
Professor
Boon, Richard
Associate
Professor
Carmona,
Guadalupe
Associate
Professor
Davis, Dennis S.
Assistant
Professor
Fies, Carmen
Associate
Professor
Smith, Page A.
Professor
Educational Psychology
Castro-Villarreal,
Felicia
Associate
Professor
Guerra, Norma S.
Associate
Professor
Gann, Candace
Karcher, Michael J.
Professor
Assistant
Professor
Harmon, Janis
Professor
Martin, Nancy K.
Professor
Henkin, Roxanne
Professor
Neely, Leslie
Assistant
Professor
Horowitz, Rosalind
Professor
Nichols, Sharon L.
Associate
Professor
Kalinec-Craig,
Crystal A.
Assistant
Professor
Orange, Carolyn M.
Professor
321
Kunnavatana,
Soraya Shanum
Assistant
Professor
Hart, Curtis L.
Associate
Professor of
Practice
Manning, Logan A.
Assistant
Professor
He, Meizi
Professor
Marone, Vittorio
Assistant
Professor
Land, William
Assistant
Professor
Oswalt, Sara B.
Martinez, Miriam G.
Professor
Associate
Professor
Mason, Lee L.
Assistant
Professor
Oyama, Sakiko
Assistant
Professor
Schnarrs, Phillip
Assistant
Professor
Ndimande,
Bekisizwe S.
Assistant
Professor
Sosa, Erica
Associate
Professor
Ullevig, Sarah
Pate, P. Elizabeth
Professor
Assistant
Professor
Wyatt, Tammy
Riojas-Cortez, Mari
Professor
Associate
Professor
Professor
Sailors, Misty
Professor
Sutterby, John A.
Associate
Professor
Yin, Zenong
Professor
Yuen, Timothy
Associate
Professor
Assistant
Professor
Cooke, William H.
Professor
Cordova, Alberto
Associate
Professor
Fogt, Donovan L.
Associate
Professor
Guan, Jianmin
Associate
Professor
College of Engineering
Name
Title
Education
Howe, Richard S.
Professor
Emeritus
Biomedical Engineering
Agarwal, Animesh
Professor
M.D., University of Texas Health
(Primary
Science Center at San Antonio
appointment Medical School
at UTHSCSA)
Agrawal, C. Mauli
Professor
322
Graduate Faculty
Appleford, Mark R.
Associate
Professor
Bailey, Steven
Kiel, Jeffrey W.
Professor
(Primary
appointment
at UTHSCSA)
Professor
B.A., University of Oregon; M.D.,
(Primary
University of Oregon Health
appointment Science Center
at UTHSCSA)
Lancaster, Jack L.
Professor
(Primary
appointment
at UTHSCSA)
Bizios, Rena
Professor
Lindsey, Merry L.
Professor
B.A., Boston University; Ph.D.,
(Primary
Baylor College of Medicine
appointment
at UTHSCSA)
Chen, Shuo
Professor
(Primary
appointment
at UTHSCSA)
Ling, Jian
Chen, Xiao-Dong
Professor
(Primary
appointment
at UTHSCSA)
Assistant
Professor
(Program
Core faculty
outside
UTHSCSA
and UTSA)
Nicolella, Daniel P.
Clarke, Geoffrey D.
Professor
(Primary
appointment
at UTHSCSA)
Assistant
Professor
(Adjunct
Faculty)
Ong, Joo L.
Professor
Ramasubramanian,
Anand
Associate
Professor
Dean, David D.
Professor
B.S., Randolph-Macon College;
(Primary
Ph.D., University of North Carolina
appointment at Chapel Hill
at UTHSCSA)
Duong, Timothy Q.
Professor
B.S., New York State University
(Primary
at Stony Brook; M.S., Ph.D.,
appointment Washington University
at UTHSCSA)
Rawls, H. Ralph
Professor
B.S, Louisiana State University;
(Primary
Ph.D., Florida State University
appointment
at UTHSCSA)
Feldman, Marc D.
Professor
M.D., University of Pennsylvania
(Primary
School of Medicine
appointment
at UTHSCSA)
Reilly, Matthew A.
Assistant
Professor
Robin, Donald A.
Professor
B.S., Boston University; M.S.,
(Primary
University of Redlands; Ph.D., Case
appointment Western Reserve University
at UTHSCSA)
Salamone, Ann B.
Assistant
Professor
(Adjunct
Faculty)
Salamone, Joseph
C.
Professor
(Adjunct
Faculty)
Finol, Ender
Fox, Peter T.
Associate
Professor
Professor
M.D., Georgetown University
(Primary
School of Medicine
appointment
at UTHSCSA)
Guda, Teja
Assistant
Professor
Gutierrez, Gloria E.
Associate
Professor
(Adjunct
Faculty)
Harris, Stephen E.
Professor
B.A., M.A., Ph.D., University of
(Primary
Texas at Austin
appointment
at UTHSCSA)
Professor
B.S., Texas A&M University; Ph.D.,
(Primary
University of Texas Health Science
appointment Center at Houston
at UTHSCSA)
Sylvia, Victor L.
Professor
B.S., M.S., Ph.D., Texas A&M
(Primary
University
appointment
at UTHSCSA)
323
Associate
Professor
Agaian, Sos S.
Professor
Vail, Neil K.
Assistant
Professor
(Adjunct
Faculty)
Akopian, David
Associate
Professor
Associate
Professor
Bhalla, Amar S.
Research
Professor
Duan, Lide
Assistant
Professor
Gatsis, Nikolas
Assistant
Professor
Professor
Bin-Shafique,
Sazzad
Associate
Professor
Grigoryan, Artyom
Associate
Professor
Browning, JoAnn
Professor
Guo, Ruyan
Professor
Dessouky, Samer
Associate
Professor
Huang, Yufei
Professor
Diaz, Manuel A.
Associate
Professor
Jamshidi,
Mohammad
Professor
Assistant
Professor
Jin, Yufang
Associate
Professor
Associate
Professor
John, Eugene
Professor
Huang, Jie
Johnson, Drew
Matamoros, Adolfo
Professor
Montoya, Arturo
Assistant
Professor
Joo, Youngjoong
Assistant
Professor
Kelley, Brian T.
Associate
Professor
Krishnan, Ram
Assistant
Professor
Pei, Ruoting
Assistant
Professor
Sharif, Hatim O.
Associate
Professor
Krishnaswami,
Hariharan
Assistant
Professor
Shephard, Les E.
Professor
Lee, Junghee
Shipley, Heather
Associate
Professor
Assistant
Professor
Lin, Wei-Ming
Professor
Weissmann, Jos
Professor
Liu, Bao
Assistant
Professor
324
Graduate Faculty
Pack, Daniel
Professor
Manteufel, Randall
D.
Associate
Professor
Qian, Chunjiang
Professor
Millwater, Harry R.
Professor
Saygin, Can
Professor
Shadaram, Mehdi
Professor
Singh, Yesh P.
Professor
Smith, Bruce
Associate
Professor
Wang, Shuo
Associate
Professor
Wan, Hung-Da
Associate
Professor
Wang, Xiaodu
Professor
Zhang, Jianqiu
(Michelle)
Associate
Professor
Zeng, Xiaowei
Assistant
Professor
Mechanical Engineering
Alaeddini, Adel
Assistant
Professor
Bagley, Ronald L.
Professor
Bhaganagar, Kiran
Assistant
Professor
Chen, F. Frank
Professor
Dong, Bing
Professor
Feng, Yusheng
Professor
Feng, Zhi-Gang
Assistant
Professor
Foster, John
Title
Education
Adams, Richard E.
W.
Professor
Emeritus
Allen, Mark E.
Professor
Emeritus
Baird, Raymond R.
Professor
Emeritus
Binks, Ronald C.
Professor
Emeritus
Cant, Norma E.
Professor
Emeritus
Cheatwood, A.
Derral
Professor
Emeritus
Assistant
Professor
Craven, Alan E.
Han, Hai-Chao
Professor
Professor
Emeritus
Daniels, Bruce C.
Karimi, Amir
Professor
Professor
Emeritus
Field, Charles T.
Professor
Emeritus
Flannagan, Dorothy
A.
Professor
Emeritus
Garcia, MaryEllen
Professor
Emeritus
Professor
Emeritus
Henderson, Dwight
F.
325
Lambert, Joanna E.
Professor
Levi, Laura J.
Associate
Professor
Muehlenbein,
Michael P.
Professor
Yaeger, Jason
Professor
Professor
Emeritus
Johnson, David R.
Professor
Emeritus
Lundy, Eileen
Associate
Professor
Emeritus
Lyons, Bonnie K.
Professor
Emeritus
Professor
Emeritus
Urdaneta, MariaLuisa
Professor
Emeritus
Gibbs, Beverly J.
Anthropology
Alconini, Sonia
Blizard, Christie L.
Assistant
Professor
Eckmann, Teresa
Assistant
Professor
Elliott, Gregory M.
Professor
Giberga, Ovidio C.
Associate
Professor
Johnson, Julie
Assistant
Professor
Labatt, Annie M.
Assistant
Professor
Little, Ken D.
Professor
Associate
Professor
Bartlett, Thad Q.
Associate
Professor
Brown, M. Kathryn
Associate
Professor
Cepek, Michael L.
Associate
Professor
McCoin, Mark H.
Ehardt, Carolyn L.
Professor
Assistant
Professor
Olsen, Dennis M.
Professor
Eichelberger, Laura
Assistant
Professor
Rowe, Elizabeth
Assistant
Professor
Fleuriet, K. Jill
Associate
Professor
Rush, Kent T.
Professor
Gelo, Daniel J.
Professor
Sherer, Scott
Associate
Professor
Associate
Professor
Hard, Robert J.
Professor
Sobr, Judith B.
Professor
Wiersema, Juliet B.
Assistant
Professor
Jacka, Jerry K.
Associate
Professor
326
Graduate Faculty
Communication
Daas, Karen
Associate
Professor
DeTurk, Sara
Associate
Professor
Barker, Wendy B.
Professor
Bayer, Mark A.
Associate
Professor
Brooks, Kinitra
Assistant
Professor
Professor
Hajek, Christopher
Associate
Professor
Colombini, Crystal
Assistant
Professor
Cuevas, T. Jackie
Assistant
Professor
Hestres, Luis
Assistant
Professor
Drinka, Bridget A.
Professor
Kang, Seok
Associate
Professor
Fonzo, Kimberly
Assistant
Professor
Hudson, Hannah
Doherty
Assistant
Professor
Hum, Sue
Associate
Professor
Kasper, Catherine
Associate
Professor
Khan, Shamshad
Assistant
Professor
Kline, Kimberly
Associate
Professor
Associate
Professor
Kellman, Steven G.
Professor
Levitt, Steven R.
Associate
Professor
Lanehart, Sonja
Professor
Mahood, Charles
(Chad)
Assistant
Professor
Moody, Joycelyn K.
Professor
McDonald, Jamie
Assistant
Professor
Olgun, Ben
Associate
Professor
Portillo, Annette
Assistant
Professor
Rojas, Viviana
Associate
Professor
Zhang, Juyan
Associate
Professor
English
Andrea, Bernadette
Professor
Ardoin, Paul
Assistant
Professor
Associate
Professor
Woodson, Linda T.
Professor
327
History
Boyd, Steven R.
Professor
Dayd-Tolson,
Santiago
Professor
Licenciado en Filosofa y
Educacin, Universidad Catlica de
Valparaso, Chile; Ph.D., University
of Kansas
Clinton, Catherine
Professor
Himelblau, Jack
Professor
Marcos-Marn,
Francisco
Professor
Membrez, Nancy J.
Associate
Professor
Davies, Brian L.
Professor
Gardner, Kirsten
Associate
Professor
Gonzales, Rhonda
Associate
Professor
Gonzalez, Gabriela
Associate
Professor
Nummikoski, R.
Marita
Associate
Professor
Oleszkiewicz,
Malgorzata
Associate
Professor
Gray, LaGuana K.
Associate
Professor
Wallace, Melissa L.
Assistant
Professor
Guy, Kolleen M.
Associate
Professor
Wickham,
Christopher
Professor
Hardgrove, Anne
Associate
Professor
Music
Kelly, Patrick J.
Associate
Professor
Associate
Professor
Komisaruk,
Catherine
Associate
Professor
Konove, Andrew
Assistant
Professor
Beavers, Jennifer
Michel, Gregg
Associate
Professor
Assistant
Professor
Associate
Professor
Brill, Mark
Associate
Professor
Nolan-Ferrell,
Catherine
Associate
Professor
Davis, Stacey
Associate
Professor
Reynolds, John F.
Professor
Dill, Susan
Associate
Professor
Romo, Ricardo
Professor
Dowdy, Eugene
Professor
Valerio-Jimnez,
Omar S.
Associate
Professor
Dunne, Matthew
Associate
Professor
Ellis, Ron
Assistant
Professor
Frego, R. J. David
Professor
Allan, Diana
328
Graduate Faculty
Keeling, Kasandra
Associate
Professor
Linard, Rita
Associate
Professor
Mabry, Gary L.
Professor
McCrary, William
Associate
Professor
Chen, Xunwu
Professor
Christensen, Joel
Associate
Professor
Hernandez, Jill
Associate
Professor
Short, William
Assistant
Professor
Thurow, Joshua
Assistant
Professor
Associate
Professor
Millican, Si
Associate
Professor
Welchman, Alistair
Nix, John
Associate
Professor
Olson, Susan
Associate
Professor
Pellegrino, Kristen
Assistant
Professor
Silantien, John J.
Stephen, J. Drew
Professor
Amberg, Stephen
Associate
Professor
Bagheri, Nazgol
Assistant
Professor
Bellows, Thomas J.
Professor
Calder, James D.
Professor
DeOliver, Miguel D.
Associate
Professor
Associate
Professor
El-Kikhia, Mansour
O.
Professor
Assistant
Professor
Engster, Daniel A.
Professor
Gervais, Bryan T.
Assistant
Professor
Wickman, Ethan
Assistant
Professor
Gundlupet,
Vaidyanatha
Assistant
Professor
Zarco, John
Assistant
Professor
Vangjel, Matthew
Jones, Richard C.
Professor
Laracey, Melvin C.
Associate
Professor
Professor
Browning, Eve
Professor
329
Mathur, Ritu
Assistant
Professor
Pillow, David R.
Associate
Professor
Professor
Ryan, Michael P.
Associate
Professor
Navarro, Sharon A.
Associate
Professor
Smith, Rebekah E.
Professor
Romero, David W.
Associate
Professor
Weston, Rebecca
Associate
Professor
Zawacki, Tina
Associate
Professor
Stefanova, Boyka
Bartkowski, John P.
Professor
Associate
Professor
Associate
Professor
Sociology
Stine, Melanie
Assistant
Professor
Denton, Melinda L.
Wilson, Walter C.
Associate
Professor
Baumann, Michael
R.
Professor
Professor
Ellison, Christopher
G.
Professor
Coyle, Thomas R.
Halley, Jeffrey A.
Professor
Lewis, Richard
Professor
Psychology
Dykes, James R.
Associate
Professor
Eisenberg, Ann R.
Professor
Marquez, Raquel
Professor
Miller, Michael V.
Associate
Professor
Ramos-Wada, Aida
Garza, Raymond T.
Professor
Assistant
Professor
Romo, Harriett D.
Professor
Hunt, Robert R.
Professor
Lopez, Stella D.
Associate
Professor
Sunil, Thankam S.
Professor
Associate
Professor
Xu, Xiaohe
Professor
Mangold, Deborah
McNaughton-Cassill, Professor
Mary E.
Osman, Augustine
Professor
330
Graduate Faculty
Public Administration
Alexander, Jennifer
Associate
Professor
Demir, Tansu
Associate
Professor
Assistant
Professor
Enriquez, Roger
Associate
Professor
Flink, Carla M.
Assistant
Professor
Gilbert, Michael J.
Associate
Professor
Hartley, Richard D.
Associate
Professor
Jackson, Dylan B.
Assistant
Professor
Moon, Byongook
Associate
Professor
Romero, Francine
Sanders
Associate
Professor
Newsome, Jamie
Assistant
Professor
Sanders, Heywood
T.
Professor
Ray, James V.
Assistant
Professor
Social Work
Name
Title
Education
Augustyn, Megan
Assistant
Professor
Caudy, Michael S.
Criminal Justice
Tillyer, Robert
Associate
Professor
Viglione, Jill
Assistant
Professor
Ambrosino, Rosalie
Professor
Chanmugam, Amy
Assistant
Professor
Christensen,
Candace
Assistant
Professor
Demography
Holway, Giuseppina Assistant
Valle
Professor
Gill, Emmett
Potter, Lloyd B.
Professor
Assistant
Professor
Harris, Richard J.
Professor
Saenz, Rogelio
Professor
Hoffman, Steven
Sanchez Soto,
Gabriela
Assistant
Professor
Assistant
Professor
Singelmann,
Joachim
Professor
Sparks, Corey
Associate
Professor
Nevarez, Lucinda
Sparks, P. Johnelle
Associate
Professor
Assistant
Professor
Perez, Alfred
Assistant
Professor
Zenteno, Rene
Professor
Teasley, Martell L.
Professor
College of Sciences
Name
Title
Education
Birnbaum, Stuart J.
Associate
Professor
Emeritus
Associate
Professor
Emeritus
Hammond, Jr.,
Weldon W.
Rodriguez, Paul H.
Professor
Emeritus
Smith, Robert K.
Professor
Emeritus
Swanson, Eric R.
Professor
Emeritus
Thyagarajan, B. S.
Professor
Emeritus
Travis, Betty S. P.
Professor
Emeritus
Professor
Emeritus
Walmsley, Judith A.
Professor
Emeritus
Cole, Garry
Professor
Derrick, Brian E.
Professor
Engelberth, Jurgen
Associate
Professor
Eppinger, Mark
Assistant
Professor
Gaufo, Gary
Associate
Professor
Gdovin, Matthew J.
Associate
Professor
Guentzel, M. Neal
Professor
Hanson, Kirsten K.
Assistant
Professor
Haro, Luis S.
Professor
Heidner, Hans W.
Professor
Hermann, Brian
Assistant
Professor
Jaffe, David B.
Professor
Klose, Karl
Professor
Biology
Apicella, Alfonso
Assistant
Professor
Arulanandam,
Bernard P.
Professor
Barea-Rodriguez,
Edwin J.
Professor
Cardona, Astrid
Associate
Professor
Cassill, J. Aaron
Professor
331
Lin, Chin-Hsing
Assistant
Professor
Lopez-Ribot, Jose
Professor
Lundell, Martha J.
Professor
McCarrey, John
Professor
Paladini, Carlos
Associate
Professor
332
Graduate Faculty
Chen, Banglin
Professor
Doyle, Michael P.
Professor
Ermler, Walter C.
Professor
Frantz, Doug
Associate
Professor
Associate
Professor
Frederick, John H.
Professor
Garcia, Carlos D.
Professor
Gorski, Waldemar
Professor
Seshu, Janakiram
Associate
Professor
Han, Hyunsoo
Sponsel, Valerie
Professor
Associate
Professor
Sunter, Garry
Professor
Jarrett, Harry W.
Professor
Kurtz, Donald M.
Professor
Suter, Kelly
Associate
Professor
Larionov, Oleg
Assistant
Professor
Teale, Judy
Professor
Troyer, Todd
Associate
Professor
Tsin, Andrew T. C.
Professor
Wanat, Matthew
Assistant
Professor
Wang, Yufeng
Professor
Wicha, Nicole
Associate
Professor
Wilson, Charles J.
Professor
Wormley, Floyd
Associate
Professor
Assistant
Professor
Perry, George
Professor
Phelix, Clyde F.
Associate
Professor
Renthal, Robert D.
Professor
Santamaria, Fidel
Associate
Professor
Saville, Stephen
Musie, Ghezai
Associate
Professor
Negrete, George R.
Professor
Perry, George
Professor
Tonzetich, Zachary
J.
Assistant
Professor
Professor
Professor
Chemistry
Alley, William
Computer Science
Boppana, Rajendra
V.
333
Wang, Xiaoyin
Assistant
Professor
Chronopoulos,
Anthony T.
Professor
White, Greg B.
Professor
Gibson, Matthew
Assistant
Professor
Xu, Shouhuai
Professor
Korkmaz, Turgay
Associate
Professor
Zhang, Weining
Associate
Professor
Lama, Palden
Assistant
Professor
Zhu, Dakai
Associate
Professor
Liu, Tongping
Assistant
Professor
Bush, Janis K.
Professor
Dutton, Alan R.
Associate
Professor
Gao, Yongli
Associate
Professor
Assistant
Professor
Haschenburger,
Judith K.
Associate
Professor
Maynard, Hugh B.
Associate
Professor
Geological Sciences
Niu, Jianwei
Associate
Professor
Quarles, John
Associate
Professor
Robbins, Kay A.
Professor
Lambert, Lance L.
Professor
Robbins, Steve
Professor
Suarez, Marina B.
Ruan, Jianhua
Associate
Professor
Assistant
Professor
Xie, Hongjie
Professor
Young, David J.
Assistant
Professor
Professor
Sandhu, Ravi
Tian, Qi
Tosun, Ali S.
Professor
Professor
Associate
Professor
Associate
Professor
Mathematics
Ahmad, Shair
334
Graduate Faculty
Cao, Weiming
Associate
Professor
Wilson, Raj
Chavez, Oscar
Associate
Professor
Chen, Fengxin
Associate
Professor
Chou, Youn-Min
Professor
Allegrini, Frdric
Adjoint
Assistant
Professor
Ayon, Arturo A.
Professor
Benacquista,
Matthew J.
Adjoint
Professor
Dueez, Eduardo
Associate
Professor
Gokhman, Dmitry
Associate
Professor
Iovino, Jos N.
Associate
Professor
Professor
Le, Dung
Professor
Chabanov, Andrey
Associate
Professor
Chen, Chonglin
Professor
Chen, Liao Y.
Professor
Norman, F.
Alexander
Associate
Professor
Pasnicu, Cornel
Professor
Pham, Du
Assistant
Professor
Popa, Mihai
Popescu, Gelu F.
Desai, Mihir
Adjoint
Associate
Professor
Assistant
Professor
Diaz, Mario
Adjoint
Professor
Dukes, Phillip
Professor
Adjoint
Professor
Fuselier, Stephen
Adjoint
Professor
Goldstein, Jerry
Adjoint
Assistant
Professor
Gruber, John B.
Professor of
Research
Guevara, Natalia V.
Adjoint
Professor
Guven, Necip
Professor of
Research
Hanke, Andreas
Adjoint
Professor
Jahn, Jrg-Micha
Adjoint
Assistant
Professor
Jenet, Fredrick
Adjoint
Professor
Prasad, Priya
Assistant
Professor
Richardson, Jr.,
Walter B.
Professor
Tavernini, Lucio
Professor
Wene, Gregory P.
Professor
Williams, Lawrence
R.
Professor
335
Koinov, Zlatko G.
Associate
Professor
Valek, Philip
Adjoint
Assistant
Professor
Libardoni, Mark
Adjoint
Professor
Waite, J. Hunter
Adjoint
Professor
Livi, Stefano
Adjoint
Professor
Whetten, Robert L.
Professor
Lopez-Lozano,
Xochitl
Assistant
Professor
Yacaman, Miguel
Jose
Professor
Martirosyan, Karen
Adjoint
Professor
Marucho, Marcelo
Assistant
Professor
Mayer, Kathryn
Assistant
Professor
McComas, David
Adjoint
Professor
Monton, Carlos
Assistant
Professor
Mukherjee, Soma
Adjoint
Professor
Nash, Kelly
Assistant
Professor
Peralta, Xomalin G.
Assistant
Professor
Pollock, Craig
Adjoint
Professor
Price, Richard H.
Adjoint
Professor
Quetschke, Volker
M.
Adjoint
Professor
Rakhmanov, Malik
Adjoint
Professor
Sardar, Dhiraj K.
Professor
Schlegel, Eric M.
Professor
Touhami, Ahmed
Adjoint
Professor